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  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with three works by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA from L to R Wings of Desire 2018 (emily Bronte’s Merlin Hawk, Nero), False Perspectives 2019 ‘Now There, I make a comma…’, Punctuation Series 2016 (Semi-Colon) at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with part of Punctuation Series 2016 (Semi-Colon) by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with part of Punctuation Series 2016 (Semi-Colon) by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with Brexit Tox by Calum Colvin RSA and Robert Crawford RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with Brexit Tox by Calum Colvin RSA and Robert Crawford RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with Brexit Tox by Calum Colvin RSA and Robert Crawford RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with False Perspectives 2019 ‘Now There, I make a comma…’ by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with False Perspectives 2019 ‘Now There, I make a comma…’ by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with two works Guys Like Flowers Too by Norman Sutton-Hibbert hung on the wall and Cityscape I by Sam Shendi at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with two works Guys Like Flowers Too by Norman Sutton-Hibbert hung on the wall and Cityscape I by Sam Shendi at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with Punctuation Series 2016 (Semi-Colon) by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with two works by Kate Whiteford OBE RSA from L to R False Perspectives 2019 ‘Now There, I make a comma…’, Punctuation Series 2016 (Semi-Colon) at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with two works Guys Like Flowers Too by Norman Sutton-Hibbert hung on the wall and Cityscape I by Sam Shendi at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Alanna Brady, Development Manager at RSA with two works Guys Like Flowers Too by Norman Sutton-Hibbert hung on the wall and Cityscape I by Sam Shendi at the RSA Open Exhibition of Art. The RSA Annual Exhibition is the most extensive exhibition of contemporary art and architecture in Scotland. The Annual Exhibition has evolved over the years, showcasing Scottish art alongside invited international artists. The exhibition runs from 2 November to 11 December 2019 at the RSA Building, Edinburgh.
    EEM_RSA Open Exhibition of Art_RD_01...JPG
  • Edinburgh's Open Eye Gallery presents an exhibition of portraits by Alexander Moffat OBE RSA timed to coincide with the publication of his monograph, A View of the Nation (Luath Press). With text by Bill Hare, the book charts Moffat’s eminent career as a portraitist of the greats of modern Scottish culture. The exhibition includes portraits of poets involved in Hugh MacDiarmid’s Scottish Renaissance as well as renowned Scottish artists Alasdair Gray, Adrian Wiszniewski, Peter Howson and Ken Currie.<br />
<br />
The exhibition runs from 10 January 2018 to 29 January 2018.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Alexander (Sandy) Moffat with his 1963 self-portrait, painted whilst he was a third-year student at Edinburgh College of Art
    EEM_Alexander Moffat - A View of the...JPG
  • Edinburgh's Open Eye Gallery presents an exhibition of portraits by Alexander Moffat OBE RSA timed to coincide with the publication of his monograph, A View of the Nation (Luath Press). With text by Bill Hare, the book charts Moffat’s eminent career as a portraitist of the greats of modern Scottish culture. The exhibition includes portraits of poets involved in Hugh MacDiarmid’s Scottish Renaissance as well as renowned Scottish artists Alasdair Gray, Adrian Wiszniewski, Peter Howson and Ken Currie.<br />
<br />
The exhibition runs from 10 January 2018 to 29 January 2018.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Alexander (Sandy) Moffat with his 1963 self-portrait, painted whilst he was a third-year student at Edinburgh College of Art
    EEM_Alexander Moffat - A View of the...JPG
  • Edinburgh's Open Eye Gallery presents an exhibition of portraits by Alexander Moffat OBE RSA timed to coincide with the publication of his monograph, A View of the Nation (Luath Press). With text by Bill Hare, the book charts Moffat’s eminent career as a portraitist of the greats of modern Scottish culture. The exhibition includes portraits of poets involved in Hugh MacDiarmid’s Scottish Renaissance as well as renowned Scottish artists Alasdair Gray, Adrian Wiszniewski, Peter Howson and Ken Currie.<br />
<br />
The exhibition runs from 10 January 2018 to 29 January 2018.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Alexander (Sandy) Moffat with his 1963 self-portrait, painted whilst he was a third-year student at Edinburgh College of Art
    EEM_Alexander Moffat - A View of the...JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Part of the exhibition includes anatomy classes led by the RSA's expert in Anatomy, George Donald
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0018.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Part of the exhibition includes anatomy classes led by the RSA's expert in Anatomy, George Donald
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0017.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Part of the exhibition includes anatomy classes led by the RSA's expert in Anatomy, George Donald
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0016.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured:  Kenny Hunter's newly commissioned work, a sculptural portrait of James Guthrie
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0022.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Alison Watt
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0023.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0012.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0005.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0006.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Alison Watt
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0025.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Alison Watt
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0024.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured:  Kenny Hunter's newly commissioned work, a sculptural portrait of James Guthrie
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0021.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: Kenny Hunter's newly commissioned work, a sculptural portrait of James Guthrie
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0019.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured:  Kenny Hunter's newly commissioned work, a sculptural portrait of James Guthrie
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0020.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured:John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0015.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0014.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0013.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0011.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0010.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0009.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0008.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0007.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0004.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0003.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0002.JPG
  • The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) and the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) have collaborated to organise a major new exhibition, which opens in Edinburgh on 4 November 2017 and runs to 7 January 2018. "Ages of Wonder: Scotland’s Art 1540 to Now" will be the largest exhibition of the RSA’s hugely significant collection ever mounted and the first to occupy the entire RSA building.<br />
<br />
The artworks on show will cover a period of nearly five centuries, from 1540 until the present day, from the The Adoration of the Kings by Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) right through to Callum Innes’s Exposed Painting Lamp Black, submitted as the artist’s Diploma Work in 2015 after his election as an Academician, and a number of new commissions. Among the exhibition’s highlights will be a spectacular recreation of a Victorian gallery hang, which in RSA Gallery 3 will see over 90 works hung as they would have in the 19th Century, from dado rail to ceiling. <br />
<br />
Pictured: John Byrne and Alison Watt in RSA Gallery 3
    EEM_Ages of Wonder_RD_021117_0001.JPG