0 Art is listed by city first then by venue, running in alphabetical order. Please send details to Alice Bain not laterthan 10 days belore publication date.
GLASGOW
O ANNAN GALLERY 130 West Campbell Street. 221 5087/8. Mon—Fri 9am—5pm: Sat 9.3()am—12.3()pm. Mackintosh Patrick Until Sat 31 Oct. An exhibition of limited and unlimited prints to celebrate the 80th birthday of this well-known Scottish landscape painter. o ART GALLERY & MUSEUM, KELVINGROVE 357 3929. Mon—Sat 10am—5pm: Sun 1—5pm. Restaurant. [D] Voluntary guides are available free ofcharge to conduct parties or individuals round the main galleries. Contact the enquiry desk. John Hope: The Enlightenment of Scottish Botany Until Sun 22 Nov. An exhibition last seen at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh where it was made. In the 18th century Hope. a member of the now-called ‘Enlightenment‘ was a professor of Medicine and Botany at Edinburgh University. Best remembered for his plans for the new Botanic Garden. he was also the first in this country to teach botany as a systematic science. The Floating World Until early Jan. 50 Special Years of the SSHA Until Sat 7 Nov. Printing with Wood Until J an 1988. O BARCLAY LENNIE FINE ART 203 Bath Street. 226 5413. Mon—Fri 10am—5pszat lllam—lpm. Mary Gallagher Mon 9—Sa128 Nov. Paintings. pastels and drawings. 0 BLYTI'ISWOOO GALLERY 161 West George Street. 226 5529. Mon—Fri 10am—5.3()pm; Sat 1()am—1pm. Recent Acquisitions Until end Nov. Work by graduates ofGlasgow School of Art. 0 THE BURRELL COLLECTION Pollokshaws Road. 649 7151. Mon—Sat 10am—5pm‘. Sun 2—5pm. Rest. [D] The glittering prizes ofone man's wealth shown under one roof. The surrounding park offers a taste of the country. The Age of Oak Throughout 1987. English oak furniture from the 17th century. 0 COLLINS GALLERY University of Strathclyde. 22 Richmond Street. 552 4400 ext 2682/2416. Mon—Fri 10am—5pm; Sat 12—4pm. Robert Doisneau Until Fri 13 Nov. Work by this French photographer
ART & EXHIBITIONS LIST
who confesses to being shy. but overcame that to photograph people.
0 CYRIL GERBER FINE ART 148 West Regent Street. 221 3095. Mon—Fri 9.3()am—5.3(lpm; Sat 9.3(lam—12.30pm.
Recent Acquisitions ol British Paintings and Drawings
0 COMPASS GALLERY 178 West Regent Street. 221 6371). Mon—Sat l()am—5.3()pm.
Senga Croall Sat 31 Oct—Wed 25 Nov. New paintings and collage from this Glasgow School of Art graduate.
O FINE ART SOCIETY 134 Blythswood Street. 332 4027. Mon—Fri 9.3(lam—5.30pm: Sat 1(lam—1pm. Contemporary Scottish Paintings Until Wed 25 Nov.
O GLASGOW ARTS CENTRE 12 Washington Street, 221 4526. Mon—Fri 10am—5pm; Sat 10—5pm. Joseph Urle Until Sat 31 Oct. This is the first one-man show Urie has had in his native city, where he was born in 1947. His dream and fantasy paintings are curious and call you back for a second look.
0 GLASGOW PRINT STUDIO 128 Ingram Street, 552 0704. Mon—Sat 10am—5.30pm.
John Taylor Mon 2—Wed 25 Nov. Prints and paintings. This will be the last exhibition at the Ingram Street gallery. A new exhibition programme will begin next year in the new building.
Move The Print Studio workshops have closed down at Ingram Street and will be fully operational in the spring at 22 King Street, sharing premises with W.A.S.P.S.
O GLASGOW UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Hillhead. Mon—Fri 9. 15am-9. 15pm: Sat 9.15am—12. 15pm.
Trotsky Until Fri 18 Dec. Material from the University’s Trotsky collection.
0 HAGGS CASTLE 100 St Andrews Drive, Mon—Sat 10am—5pm; Sun 2-5pm. Glasgow‘s museum for children.
All Creatures Great and Small Until Sun 22 Nov.
0 HILLREAO LIBRARY 348 Byres Road, 339 7223. Mon—Fri 9.30am-lpm, 2-8pm; Sat
OUIET COLLAGES
Mercury Gallery, Edinburgh Nothing jars at Philip Reeves’ exhibition at the Mercury. There is no riot in even his brightest colours. These almost-abstract collages make room for thought rather than provoke it. Though they make no assumptions, these are positive paintings. Linear shapes push up and out, curves make holistic semi-circles. Reeves cross-sections landscape and carves out the moon in cut and torn cardboard, newsprint or lino. Paint flattens them like lresco, creating patterns and moods better described musically than literally. Reeves takes elements of landscape, weather and season and arranges them like notes on a score to become something new. He uses colour, like the gentle contrast 01 red and green in ‘Balcony' tor harmony, and shape, like the straight vertlcals 01 ‘Urban Project’ for dynamics. They are
romantic, interior scenes, lovelyto look at and restful to live with.
All the work in this exhibition is painted collage, but Philip Reeves is perhaps best known in connection with prlntmaklng. ln197o, he led the Printmaking Department at Glasgow School of Art out of graphics and into line art, where It has remained. He was also a loundlng member of both the Edinburgh Printmakers Workshop and then the Glasgow Print Studio. Whichever medium he chooses, and he has never restrlcted himself to prlntmaklng alone, Reeves works slngle-mlndedly on developing and stretching hls compositions within a personally imposed lramework. lee Merce Cunnlngham‘s choreography, the lreedom and attractlon at his work lies in the element at chance. (Alice Baln).
9.30am—1pm and 2—5pm. Closed Wed. Phil Petherbrldge Until end Oct. Landscape pastels. O HUNTERIAN ART GALLERY University ofGlasgow. Hillhead Street. 330 5431. Mon—Fri 9.3(1am—5pm; Sat 9.3(lam—1pm. Conference -Aspects ol Scottish Decorative Art in the Twentieth Century Sat 14 Nov. 9.3(1am—6pm. The Hunterian are holding the first conference on Scottish Decorative Art. a subject with a growing interest and particularly at home here close to the gallery‘s reconstruction of a Mackintosh House. Glassmaking. furniture. fashion. textiles. book design and interior design are just some of the details discussed on this busy day. The conference is open to all those who book in advance by contacting the Hunterian and costs a mere £7 for non—members ofthe Scottish Society for Art History and £4.50 for members and students. The Mackintosh House Gallery: Open as above but closed for lunch l2.3()—1.3()pm. 5(lp admission on weekday afternoons and Saturdays. A reconstruction of the architect‘s home fitted with original furniture. Mackintosh Graphics Until Dec. Original designs and printed graphics for posters. invitations. menus. advertising labels etc. and representative examples by Mackintosh‘s contemporaries. Margaret and Francis MacDonald and James Herbert MacNairn. A Decade of Acquisitions 1977-1987 Sat 31 Oct—16Jan. Scotland‘s best-off university gallery shows off its newest purchases. Stubbs shares space with Hockney and de Kooning. 0 HUNTERIAN MUSEUM The University ofGlasgow. 3398855. Mon—Fri 9.3(lam—5pm; Sat 9.3(lam—lpm. Twice named Museum ofthe Year. the Hunterian Collection includes objects ranging from Captain Cook‘s Pacific treasures to the Bearsden Shark. Crystals in Industry Until Sat 5 Dec. Crystals are bedded deep into the structure of modern industrial life. 0 IMAGES GALLERY 74 Hyndland Road. 334 5311. Mon—Fri 9.3(lam—5.3()pm. Sat 9.30am—5pm. Alexander Graham Munro 1903—1985 Until Sat 31 Oct. Oils. watercolours and drawings. 0 J. O. KELLY GALLERY 1 18 Douglas Street. 0 LILLIE ART GALLERY Station Road. Milngavie. 956 2351. Tue—Fri 11am—5pm and 7-9pm: Sat and Sun 2—5pm. Anniversary Exhibition Until Fri 20 Nov. It is 25 years since the Lillie opened. Opened by the widow of the founder and Glasgow Herald Washington correspondent. Robert Lillie, this exhibition will change twice during the nine weeks to show the entire collection. It will also be possible to see the specially commissioned work by Mary Armour and prints of the area by Harry Magee. Philip Reeves. Barbara Robertson and Willie Rodger. Lecture Series Bill Wright—Paintings Wed 4 Nov. Ceramics—Marjery Clinton Wed 11 Nov. Sense and
32 The List 30 Oct — 12 Nov