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  • EMBARGOED UNTIL 00:01 2 APRIL 2017<br />
<br />
Pictured: Alison McCrorie, housing specialist at the Lothian Veterans Centre, chatted to Troy Johnson, former Lance Corporal in the Royal Marine Camandos.<br />
During his visit to the Lothians Veteran Centre in Dalkeith on Friday 31 March, Veterans Secretary Keith Brown  announced the successful applicants to the 2017 Scottish Veterans Fund.<br />
The Lothians Veteran Centre provides a person-centred support service for ex-service personnel and their families across Lothians, including projects relating to housing, benefits & welfare, and employment, education and training support.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 31 March 2017
    SCT_EEm_Scottish_Veterans_Funds_2017...jpg
  • Bonhams picture specialist May Matthews makes the final adjustments to the positioning of Purple Tulips by the Scottish Colourist painter George Leslie Hunter.  It is estimated at £120,000-150,000. <br />
<br />
The painting was once in the collection of Baroness Elliot of Harwood of Rulewater DBE LLD (1903-1994),one of the most colourful, Scottish figures of the last century. One of the first women to be made a Life Peer and the first Life Peeress to speak in the House of Lords, she enjoyed a long and distinguished life of public service. <br />
<br />
Hunter was a well-known landscape and portrait painter when, during the1920s, his friend and biographer Tom Honeyman encouraged him to concentrate on painting still-life. In 1925, Alex Reid Gallery held a critically acclaimed exhibition of Hunter's work, and in the same year, the artist exhibited in London alongside the other painters – Peploe, Fergusson, and Cadell – who later became known collectively known as the Scottish Colourists.
    EEm_Bonhams_Annual_Sale_Edinburgh_GE...jpg
  • Bonhams picture specialist May Matthews makes the final adjustments to the positioning of Purple Tulips by the Scottish Colourist painter George Leslie Hunter.  It is estimated at £120,000-150,000. <br />
<br />
The painting was once in the collection of Baroness Elliot of Harwood of Rulewater DBE LLD (1903-1994),one of the most colourful, Scottish figures of the last century. One of the first women to be made a Life Peer and the first Life Peeress to speak in the House of Lords, she enjoyed a long and distinguished life of public service. <br />
<br />
Hunter was a well-known landscape and portrait painter when, during the1920s, his friend and biographer Tom Honeyman encouraged him to concentrate on painting still-life. In 1925, Alex Reid Gallery held a critically acclaimed exhibition of Hunter's work, and in the same year, the artist exhibited in London alongside the other painters – Peploe, Fergusson, and Cadell – who later became known collectively known as the Scottish Colourists.
    EEm_Bonhams_Annual_Sale_Edinburgh_GE...jpg
  • Bonhams picture specialist May Matthews makes the final adjustments to the positioning of Purple Tulips by the Scottish Colourist painter George Leslie Hunter.  It is estimated at £120,000-150,000. <br />
<br />
The painting was once in the collection of Baroness Elliot of Harwood of Rulewater DBE LLD (1903-1994),one of the most colourful, Scottish figures of the last century. One of the first women to be made a Life Peer and the first Life Peeress to speak in the House of Lords, she enjoyed a long and distinguished life of public service. <br />
<br />
Hunter was a well-known landscape and portrait painter when, during the1920s, his friend and biographer Tom Honeyman encouraged him to concentrate on painting still-life. In 1925, Alex Reid Gallery held a critically acclaimed exhibition of Hunter's work, and in the same year, the artist exhibited in London alongside the other painters – Peploe, Fergusson, and Cadell – who later became known collectively known as the Scottish Colourists.
    EEm_Bonhams_Annual_Sale_Edinburgh_GE...jpg
  • Bonhams picture specialist May Matthews makes the final adjustments to the positioning of Purple Tulips by the Scottish Colourist painter George Leslie Hunter.  It is estimated at £120,000-150,000. <br />
<br />
The painting was once in the collection of Baroness Elliot of Harwood of Rulewater DBE LLD (1903-1994),one of the most colourful, Scottish figures of the last century. One of the first women to be made a Life Peer and the first Life Peeress to speak in the House of Lords, she enjoyed a long and distinguished life of public service. <br />
<br />
Hunter was a well-known landscape and portrait painter when, during the1920s, his friend and biographer Tom Honeyman encouraged him to concentrate on painting still-life. In 1925, Alex Reid Gallery held a critically acclaimed exhibition of Hunter's work, and in the same year, the artist exhibited in London alongside the other painters – Peploe, Fergusson, and Cadell – who later became known collectively known as the Scottish Colourists.
    EEm_Bonhams_Annual_Sale_Edinburgh_GE...jpg
  • Bonhams picture specialist May Matthews makes the final adjustments to the positioning of Purple Tulips by the Scottish Colourist painter George Leslie Hunter.  It is estimated at £120,000-150,000. <br />
<br />
The painting was once in the collection of Baroness Elliot of Harwood of Rulewater DBE LLD (1903-1994),one of the most colourful, Scottish figures of the last century. One of the first women to be made a Life Peer and the first Life Peeress to speak in the House of Lords, she enjoyed a long and distinguished life of public service. <br />
<br />
Hunter was a well-known landscape and portrait painter when, during the1920s, his friend and biographer Tom Honeyman encouraged him to concentrate on painting still-life. In 1925, Alex Reid Gallery held a critically acclaimed exhibition of Hunter's work, and in the same year, the artist exhibited in London alongside the other painters – Peploe, Fergusson, and Cadell – who later became known collectively known as the Scottish Colourists.
    EEm_Bonhams_Annual_Sale_Edinburgh_GE...jpg