Victoria Crowe
“Victoria Crowe had found a landscape that suited her. It was dramatic certainly. It was spare and austere, too, as her painting had already often been, but the special quality that perhaps drew such a response from her was the way that it defied all the popular tropes of representational landscape painting. She herself said of these pictures, ‘I liked the transforming nature of the snow – the commonplace becomes strangely different, the familiar contours of the field and hill become softened and unsure’.”
— Duncan Macmillan, ‘Victoria Crowe’
I’ve always loved to draw: from art school days, drawing became a conversation with myself which has stayed with me as an important reflection on life as I get older. Being at art school in the 60s brought with it the realisation that I had found the right place to grow and develop.
During those formative years, I came into contact with so much new thinking, and the three-year post-graduate at RCA was a gift in which to widen, consolidate and assimilate the experience. I was hugely lucky to have met my life partner, Michael Walton, a painting student at the same time, and to share our subsequent journey. Immediately after my degree show, we moved to Scotland where I began teaching at Edinburgh College of Art and developing my own practice as a painter. I began responding to the landscape around a new home in the Pentland Hills south of Edinburgh.
So began a lifetime’s involvement with painting. The work has responded to creative ideas and enquiry that events and people have brought into my life. It has reflected on a growing interest in psychology, symbolism, poetry and music as well as on personal research, family trauma, travel and the wonderful opportunity to have a studio in Venice.
In 2019 the City Art Centre in Edinburgh exhibited 50 Years of Painting, a lifetime retrospective of my work. One of the most important aspects of this show for me was a confirmation that my art had been central to my evolving understanding of my life experiences: all the new thoughts, the family events, concerns about the natural world and the mystery of existence were all there. The inner conversation is still continuing!
BIOGRAPHY
Victoria Crowe studied at Kingston School of Art and the Royal College of Art, London, before being invited to join Edinburgh College of Art in 1968, where she taught drawing and painting until 1998.
Over the last 35 years Victoria Crowe, one of Scotland’s leading painters, has established herself as a painter whose work is instantly recognisable. While the full range of her painting covers landscape, still lifes, portraits, self-portraits and interiors, much of her work defies such precise categorisation.
She has been described as ‘one of the most vital and original figurative painters currently at work in Scotland’. Her work is represented in a large number of public and private collections. She lives and works in the Scottish Borders and Venice.
Victoria Crowe is represented by The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh and Flowers Gallery, London.
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Midnight Dawn, 2024Victoria Crowe, Midnight Dawn, 2024660.00
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Night Reflection, 2024Victoria Crowe, Night Reflection, 2024660.00
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Stillness, 2022Victoria Crowe, Stillness, 20221,100.00
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Resilient Tree, Rising Moon, 2021Victoria Crowe, Resilient Tree, Rising Moon, 2021Sold