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Person/Organisation

Salmon, James Jr

  • S930
  • Person

James Salmon (Junior) was born on 13 April 1873 at 12 Seton Terrace, Glasgow, the son of architect William Forrest Salmon and Jessie Alexander, and grandson of architect James Salmon (Senior). He was initially educated privately and sent to Glasgow High School in September 1883. After his mother's sudden death in 1887 while staying with her sister and brother-in-law Elizabeth and William Scott Morton in Edinburgh, James and his brother Hugh (born 16 November 1874) were brought up partly by their father's formidable elder sister Wilhelmina - 'Aunt Mina' - who had looked after her father since her mother's death in 1881. Hugh was tall like his father and grandfather, James was relatively short in stature resulting in the sobriquets of 'Wee Troot' or 'Sardine', both of which he used himself. He was witty, forceful and irreverent both as a speaker and as a writer. Although he could often be hilarious his brother Hugh recalled that he never laughed: a sardonic 'Huh huh' was as much as he could manage.

After the death of James Salmon (Senior) on 5 June 1888, William Forrest continued the business under the same name. In the same year James Salmon Junior left Glasgow High School to join the family firm, where he remained for two year, studying at Glasgow School of Art. In 1890 he was sent to William Leiper's office to complete his apprenticeship, continuing to attend the classes at Glasgow School of Art until 1891 and again from 1892 to 1895, an unusually extended period. His aim appears to have been not only to benefit from the teaching of William James Anderson but also to maintain links with the 'New Sculpture' group there, the cosmopolitan Francis Derwent Wood, who had studied in Karlsruhe and Paris, the Dutchman Johan Keller and their Scots student Albert Hodge (who were to have a profound effect on the firm's architecture in the later 1890s and early 1900s).

James left Leiper's office in 1894 at the end of his articles. Leiper's influence on him was to remain marked in both commercial and domestic work. As a twenty-first birthday present Forrest sent him on a Grand Tour of the continent which is partly chronicled in watercolours in the Salmon collection at NMRS made between April and July of that year; the tour included France, Germany, Switzerland, Norway, Belgium, Holland, Austria, Hungary, Romania, Turkey, Greece and Spain. He returned to the family firm in March 1895 to find John Gaff Gillespie (born 1870) in charge of most of the design work. Gillespie had been articled to James Milne Monro c. 1884, concurrently attending classes at Glasgow School of Art, and he won the Glasgow Institute of Architects prize in 1889 jointly with Charles Rennie Mackintosh. This had brought him to the notice of Forrest Salmon who engaged him in 1891. Like Mackintosh at Honeyman & Keppie, Gillespie was given design responsibility very early, notably at the free Flemish Renaissance Scottish Temperance League building in 1893 and the West of Scotland Convalescent Seaside Homes at Dunoon in 1895. Sometime in that same year, Forrest made Gillespie a partner, the everyday work of the practice having grown as a result of Forrest having secured some of the business of the British Linen Bank, whose architects were usually J M Dick Peddie & Washington Browne. Unlike the diminutive James Salmon, Gillespie was very tall, slim and cleanshaven with a calm equable temperament.

On his return James Salmon Junior worked under his father and Gillespie for rather more than two years, being given much of the design responsibility for Mercantile Chambers on Bothwell Street, a huge project in which the Salmons had a financial interest and which was to become their office. James became a partner in 1898, but for the next few years and even beyond the individual design responsibilities of Gillespie and James Junior are not always easy to separate. Their names were not acknowledged in the practice title until November 1903 when the firm became Salmon Son & Gillespie.

By that date there had been domestic changes in the Salmon family. Wilhelmina had remained unmarried and eventually a house at Lochgoilhead, renamed Gowandean, was bought for her and extended in 1897-98, before her father's death. On 11 June 1889 Forrest, remembered in the family as something of a ladies' man, married Agnes Cooper Barry, the daughter of a Forfar grocer who lived with her brother the Reverend James Cooper Barry, a civil engineer who had switched career to become a Free Church minister in 1882 and had obtained the charge of the North Free Church at Dumbarton. Neither Wilhelmina nor Forrest's sons took to Agnes, always referring to her as 'Steppy'. Hugh left home in 1894 to work for his grandfather at Arrat Mill, Brechin, and Auchenblae, Kincardineshire, emigrating to Dunedin in 1898 as wool and seed manager to Wright Stephenson & Company. James remained at home and in 1898 the Salmon family moved to the newly built Rowantreehill at Kilmacolm where they rapidly acquired a significant domestic clientele.

In his later years Forrest became prominent in professional matters as a Governor of Glasgow School of Art, President of the Glasgow Institute of Architects 1892-94, and a member of the RIBA Council. It was probably due to his influence that Gillespie and James Junior were admitted directly to Fellowship of the RIBA on 3 December 1906, James's proposers being Leiper, John James Burnet, Watson and his father. By 1906 both Gillespie and James Junior had travelled extensively. James Junior's nomination paper records travel in Norway, Holland (1904), Romania, Austria and Hungary (1904), France (1894 and 1906), Switzerland (1894), Spain, Italy (1894 and 1904), Greece and Turkey (probably 1904). We also know from a letter from James to Hugh Salmon of 14 April 1903 that James had travelled to Brittany in 1896 with Robert (Bob') Whyte. Sketches and photographs preserved in the Salmon collection at NMRS have left his travels well documented.

By the early 1900s Gillespie and Salmon's styles had begun to diverge, Gillespie's work tending to be a simplified free classic and Salmon's still a sculpturesque art nouveau as seen in the alternative elevational treatments in the competition for the new Glasgow and West of Scotland Technical College competition of 1901, both partners adopting a highly simplified arts and crafts style for domestic, cottage hospital and golf clubhouse work. But from 1904 when they received the commission for Lion Chambers both Gillespie and James Junior had become interested in the possibilities of reinforced concrete, working closely with the structural engineer Louis Gustave Mouchel, the British-based representative of Francois Hennebique. Within the firm Forrest seems to have been responsible for the 'scheming out' of commissions, the detailed design work being delegated to Gillespie or to his son James. Forrest was latterly known as the commercial traveller adept at moving in Parish Council School Board and clubland circles to obtain directly commissioned work for the practice which spent much of its time on designs for national and local competitions, none of which it succeeded in actually winning until 1908 when William Leiper selected their design for Stirling Municipal Buildings which was mainly Gillespie's work. Construction was, however, some years away and in the summer of 1911 Forrest began to suffer from cancer. He died at Rowantreehill on 7 October. By his own wish he was buried with his first wife and the Scott Mortons at Merchiston Cemetery, Edinburgh. He left moveable estate of £7,008 11s. 4d..

While the Finance Act of 1909 had probably affected the prosperity of the practice as it had so many others, Forrest Salmon's will proved the catalyst for the dissolution of the partnership in June 1913. The will made no provision for James to inherit his share of the practice; instead, it remained part of his trust estate and entitled 'Steppy' to a share of such profits as the firm had at that time. Gillespie now became senior partner and as James Junior had spent all his income on foreign travel and motoring (as a letter to Hugh of 18 August 1910 records) he could not afford to buy out either Gillespie or his stepmother. Gillespie bought out Agnes's interest, retaining the office in Mercantile Chambers, the archive (which was later sent for pulping when his successor Jack Antonio Coia was interned in 1940) and the Stirling commission. James moved out to a rented flat at 48 Jane Street, Blythswood Square which was both home and office, apparently without even a secretary. He retained the commission received in 1909 for the Admiralty Village at Cove Farm, Greenock of which only a few houses had been built in 1910, and was allowed to revive the name of the firm as it had existed prior to 1903, James Salmon & Son, later abbreviated simply to James Salmon FRIBA.

The few clients James Salmon Junior had for actual building in 1913-14 were all medical, probably introduced through his friend Dr James Devon. He developed Repertory Theatre connections from 1914 but although he made many sketch designs, one including an hotel, none of these was pursued further. When war came his Admiralty connections stood him in surprisingly good stead, with the garden village development at Cove Farm going ahead; he also received commissions for workers' housing at Greenock and Cambuslang, which were not built. The income from these enabled him to marry, in a civil ceremony on 2 (or 14;

Sources vary) February 1917, Dr Agnes Picken, a colleague of Dr Devon's at Duke Street Prison, remembered by Hugh's daughter Anne as 'a very direct, no nonsense, amusing resolute woman who had had to make her own way in the world'. They lived in Salmon's house and office in Jane Street and at the end of the war became deeply involved in welfare work in the Balkans, particularly in respect of Dr Katherine McPhail's Sanatorium for sick children at Brababic, Ragusa working in association with the American Relief Administration European Children's Fund. Lectures given in 1920 and 1921, together with other papers relating to these activities, survive.

Salmon's post-war clients remained exclusively medical, his only sizeable commission being the reconstruction of Redlands on Great Western Road as Glasgow Women's Private Hospital, begun in 1921. Like his father he took a particular interest in professional matters and was editor of the RIAS Quarterly in 1921-22.

James Salmon's last months greatly distressed his wife and friends. By the autumn of 1923 he was unable to continue his practice because of bowel cancer. Moreover he was responsible for his aunt Wilhelmina who had become senile with arterio sclerosis and had to be taken into Craighouse, Edinburgh, the cost of which must have been a considerable financial strain. She died on 9 January 1924 and it fell to him to wind up what was left of his grandfather's Trust for her. Salmon himself died only three-and-a-half months later on 27 April, at his home, 48 Jane Street. The letters Dr Devon wrote to keep him amused and interested in his last weeks are in the NMRS collection. His estate amounted to only £535 9s. 6d., part of which was his inheritance from his Aunt Wilhelmina's Trust; his funeral was private.

Sources: Dictionary of Scottish Architects: http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/architect_full.php?id=203315

Samuel, Andrew

  • P13
  • Person
  • fl c1960s-1990s

Andrew ('Drew') William Dougall Samuel was admitted ARIBA in 1968. He set up practice on his own in Blanefield. In 1975 he was working in association with the Robertson Nelson Partnership. By 1980 he had a branch office in Callander.

Sandeman, Margot

  • S568
  • Person
  • 1922-2009

Margot Sandeman was born in Glasgow, the daughter of embroiderer Muriel Boyd and self-taught watercolourist Archibald Sandeman. Her mother, whose work became internationally known, had studied at Glasgow School of Art under Jessie Newbery.

Margot followed her mother to GSA where she was quickly singled out, along with Joan Eardley, by Hugh Adam Crawford, head of drawing and painting, for an experiment in which a very small number of outstanding students in that 1939 session were selected for special attention. This effectively amounted to a three-year course in two years, with Crawford himself as tutor. Sandeman and Eardley, who were life-long friends, lived not far from each other in Bearsden, and frequently drew and painted together in the Campsies, and later at Corrie on Arran.

Graduating in 1942, Sandeman was sent on wartime work to Bletchley Park until she was granted compassionate leave to look after her sick mother. In 1946 she married the potter and ceramicist James Robson, an art-school contemporary. The couple purchased the Bothy, a small house in High Corrie, Arran, as a place to spend the summer with their two sons. The island became her second home, to which she returned at least annually.

In 1970 she won the Guthrie Award of the Royal Scottish Academy, the Redpath Award from the Society of Scottish Artists and a Scottish Arts Council prize, going on in 1989 to be Scottish winner in the Laing Competition. The Arran landscape was a constant inspiration for her paintings. She also collaborated with her old friend and Art School contemporary Ian Hamilton Finlay on his texts, creating a parallel series of still-lifes plus illustrations for his "concrete poetry". Another project saw her produce a suite of paintings to accompany a celebration of the life of dramatist and poet Robert McLellan, a neighbour in High Corrie.

The critic Cordelia Oliver was among many admirers, stating, "among Scottish painters of her own time, there is no other whose work reveals such a combination of deep-rootedness in a given place with an equally strong sense of mind set free to soar into a world of visual poetry".

Sandeman-Bernuth, Suse

  • P87
  • Person
  • 1900-1977

Born on the 30th of July 1900 in Wesel, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Died in Wuppertal, Germany on the 7th of October 1977. If you have any further information please get in touch.

Sander, Thomas Edward

  • P383
  • Person
  • 1984-

Tom Sander was born in Hull in 1984 and studied at Leeds College of Art & Design between 2002 and 2003 and then at Glasgow School of Art from 2003 to 2007. In 2005 he studied at The School of Art Institute of Chicago. He was the recipient of the Glasgow Sculpture Studios graduate award 2007; The Glasgow Print Studios graduate award 2007, W.O. Hutchenson Prize for Drawing 2007 and the W.A.S.P.S graduate studio award 2007 . Sander’s works develop from an interest in recording pattern and incident in everyday life and a fascination in how the built environment is interrupted by improvisation, spontaneity and decay. The outcomes oscillate between 2D and 3D production including drawings, etchings, collage, objects and actions.

Sanders, Hilary

  • P767
  • Person
  • fl 1977

Hilary Sanders was a Silversmithing and Jewellery student at The Glasgow School of Art in the 1970s. She won the Johnson Matthey Silver Award in 1977.

Sangster, Shona

  • P791
  • Person
  • fl 1988

Shona Sangster was a student at The Glasgow School of Art in the 1980s.

Sarkezi, Anita

  • P1056
  • Person
  • 1989-

Born in Halmstad, Sweden, into a working-class Slovenian migrant family and returned to Slovenia during her school years. She has since then lived in several European countries. She moved to Scotland in 2018. Sarkezi's textile design practice is motivated and informed by her Slavic cultural background. Her work is grounded in the interwoven histories of rural material culture and post-colonialism in Central and Eastern Europe, where she questions the traditional use of floral patterns as national symbols. Her practice explores the relationship between organic and geometric shapes. Using the TC2 digital loom, Sarkezi constructs an imaginary space consisting of personal ornaments and motifs and bold and gradient uses of colour. This serves as a visual metaphor for the flux of movement and migration and an outlet for her narrative as a migrant.

Savage, Jane Renfrew

  • S989
  • Person

Jane Renfrew Savage lived in Tarbert, Argyll and Glasgow, studying at The Glasgow School of Art between 1916 and 1917. During this time she took day classes in Design, taught by Miss Ann Macbeth, Assistant Mistress of Design and Decorative Art, who taught at the School between 1902 and 1928/9. While attending the School, Savage's occupation was listed as a Teacher of Lacemaking.

Th Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Jane Renfrew Savage:

  • 1916-17 (415)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Saville, Jenny

  • P913
  • Person
  • 1970-

Attracted to Glasgow by the growing reputation of recent graduates such as Steven Campbell and Ken Currie, and the emphasis on traditional skills in the fine arts course, Saville studied at the GSA from 1988-1992. During her time at the School, she won a one-term scholarship to Cincinnati, USA, where she took a course that focussed on women in art and society.

On graduating, her work attracted the attention of the art collector Charles Saatchi, who supported her while she created new works for his 1994 exhibition, “Young British Artists III.” This show, and the RA’s1997 “Sensation” exhibition of work by Young British Artists brought critical acclaim and public recognition.

Best known for her large-scale oil paintings of fleshy, obese female figures painted in an unflinching manner, Saville is now regarded as one of the foremost painters of her generation. She lectured at The Slade School of Fine Arts, London between 2000 – 2006 and was elected an RA in 2007.

Sawers, Elizabeth Kerr

  • S1273
  • Person

Elizabeth Kerr Sawers was born on the 13th of November 1894, growing up in Giffnock, to the South of Glasgow. She took afternoon classes in Design at The Glasgow School of Art between 1915 and 1916, while completing her studies at The Glasgow and West of Scotland College of Domestic Science. Under a scheme drawn up by the Governors' of the two Central Institutions and approved of by the Scotch Education Department, the students of The Glasgow and West of Scotland College of Domestic Science who possessed a Diploma of the College, could pass on to the School of Art to receive advanced instruction in the subjects of Art Needle Craft and Embroidery.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Elizabeth Kerr Sawers:

  • 1915-16 (329)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Saxton, Donald Davidson

  • S1274
  • Person

Donald Davidson Saxton was born on the 28th of February 1885, living in a variety of areas around Glasgow, including the West End and Springburn to the North. In 1904, at the age of 19, Saxton studied for a year at The Glasgow School of Art where he took evening classes with Jean Delville, a Belgian Professor of Life Painting and Drawing, while working in Portraiture. Following a break in his studies he returned to the School in 1914, staying enrolled until 1916. During 1914-15 he undertook evening classes in Life Drawing, while the following academic year 1915-16 his focus lay in Drawing and Painting day classes. These later years at the School sat alongside his professional life, in which he worked on Artist Enlargements in black and white during 1914-15, specialising as a Finisher of Enlargements during 1915-16.

Between 1936-1951 Saxton exhibited a variety of his work in The Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts Exhibitions. Details of specific works exhibited can be found in The Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts : A Dictionary of Exhibitors at the Annual Exhibitions of the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts, Complied by Roger Billcliffe, Volume 4 (Q-Z), available in The Glasgow School of Art Archives.

Further periods of public exhibition took place between 1938-1949, during which a variety of Saxton's work were shown in The Royal Scottish Academy Exhibitions. Details of specific works exhibited can be found in The Royal Scottish Academy Exhibitors 1826-1990: A Dictionary of Artists and their Work in the Annual Exhibitions of The Royal Scottish Academy, Volume IV (R-Z), available in The Glasgow School of Art Archives.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Donald D. Saxton:

  • 1904-05 (504)
  • 1914-15 (279)
  • 1915-16 (281)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Say, Nesta

  • S1275
  • Person

Nesta Say was born on the 19th of October 1897, growing up in Cathcart at Braehead Villa. During the 1914-15 session of The Glasgow School of Art, Say studied day classes in Book Illustration.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Nesta Say:

  • 1914-15 (680)

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Sayers, Charles

  • S447
  • Person

Charles Marshall Sayers was born in Kirkcudbright on 21st December 1892, one of eight children of Janet Sayers and James Charles Sayers, a joiner. Sayers was a woodworker and attended The Glasgow School of Art from 1913 to 1914 as a student of modelling. During the First World War, Sayers served as a Fitter Corporal and then 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery and was awarded the 1914-1915 Star and British War Medal and Victory Medal. After sailing from Kirkcudbright to Quebec in 1924, Sayers stayed with his brother James in Seattle, Washington. Sayers then lived in Carmel, California from 1928 and was director of a wood carving school there. In 1942 Sayers wrote a beginner's guide to wood sculpture called Book for Wood Carving, which was republished in 1978. According to AskArt he died in Contra Costa County on 10th May 1972. Sayers is commemorated on The Glasgow School of Art's First World War Roll of Honour.

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: Scotland's People: http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk, Ancestry: http://www.ancestry.co.uk; AskArt: http://www.askart.com; The National Archives Discovery: http://www.discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Scade, Christine M

  • S1276
  • Person

Christine M. Scade was born on the 20th of September 1902, residing between Ladybrow Farm, near Darvel in Ayrshire and a variety of, possibly term time addresses, in Mount Florida. Between 1918 and 1921, Scade studied various day classes at The Glasgow School of Art, specifically Drawing and Painting classes during the 1918-19 and 1919-20 sessions. In her final year at The Glasgow School of Art, 1920-21, Scade pursued evening classes in her preferred subject of Drawing and Painting.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Christine M. Scade:

  • 1918-19 (223)
  • 1919-20 (191)
  • 1920-21 (377)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Schade, William Bernard

  • P202
  • Person
  • 1948-2008

William Schade is known for his lively animal portraits in several media, including painting and drawing, sculpture, bookmaking, and drypoint etching. A graduate of the University at Albany, State University of New York, and the Cranbrook Academy of Art, and a former faculty member of Sage College in Albany, New York.

Schiltz, Elisa

  • S1277
  • Person

Elisa Schiltz was born during 1890 and resided in the West End of Glasgow, at 2 Doune Terrace, North Kelvinside while pursuing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art. During the 1915-16 session, Schiltz took evening classes in Drawing and Painting at the School.

Originally from Belgium she was one of at least eight Belgian students that attended the School between 1914 and 1916. It is likely these students were Belgian refugees, arriving in Britain when their country became occupied upon the outbreak of World War One. This information is based on a research project investigating the number of international students who attended The Glasgow School of Art between 1903 and 1949.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Elisa Schiltz:

  • 1915-16 (383)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Schofield, Frances Bell

  • S1278
  • Person

Jane Renfrew Savage lived in Tarbert, Argyll and Glasgow, studying at The Glasgow School of Art between 1916 and 1917. During this time she took day classes in Design, taught by Miss Ann Macbeth, Assistant Mistress of Design and Decorative Art, who taught at the School between 1902 and 1928/9. While attending the School, Savage's occupation was listed as a Teacher of Lacemaking.

Th Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Jane Renfrew Savage:

  • 1916-17 (415)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Schotz, Benno

  • P228
  • Person
  • 1891-1984

Benno Schotz was born on the 28th of August 1891, to a family of watchmakers in Estonia. In 1911 he left his homeland to begin studying engineering in Darmstadt, Germany before emigrating to Glasgow, transferring to Royal Technical College where he gained an engineering diploma. From 1914 to 1923 he worked in the drawing office of John Brown and Company, a Clydebank shipbuilders, while attending evening classes in Sculpture, including Modelling and Stonemasonry, at The Glasgow School of Art from 1914-1921. During the 1914-15 session Schotz received a bursary from The City Educationall Endowments Board worth £3.

In 1920 he was elected President of the Society of Painters and Sculptors, Glasgow, and three years later he became a sculptor full time with his first solo exhibition held at Reid and Lefevre’s in 1926. Later he went on to teach at The Glasgow School of Art, becoming the Head of Sculpture in 1938-1962. He was also appointed Her Majesty's Sculptor in Ordinary for Scotland, 1938.

From 1917 until his death in 1984 Schotz exhibited widely, with work included on numerous occasions by The Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts and in The Royal Scottish Academy. In 1985, the year following his death, both institutions held memorial exhibitions. Details of specific works exhibited can be found in The Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Art : A Dictionary of Exhibitors at the Annual Exhibitions of the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts, Complied by Roger Billcliffe, Volume 4 (Q-Z), and in The Royal Scottish Academy Exhibitors 1826-1990: A Dictionary of Artists and their Work in the Annual Exhibitions of The Royal Scottish Academy, Volume IV (R-Z), available in The Glasgow School of Art Archives. Schotz spent most of his adult life in Glasgow, playing an active role in the City’s Jewish community. He passed away in 1984 and is buried in Jerusalem.

A variety of his sandstone sculptures adorn building and bridges across Glasgow, details and locations of which can be found in Sculpture in Glasgow: an illustrated handbook and Public Sculpture of Glasgow, both by Ray McKenzie, available in The Glasgow School of Art Archives.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number for Benno Schotz:
1914-15 (74)

1916-17 (274)

1917-18 (277)

1918-19 (185)

1920-21 (1225)

Schwabe, Randolph

  • P293
  • Person
  • 1885-1948

Influential teacher, draughtsman and printmaker, especially of urban subjects, illustrator and designer. Born in Manchester, Schwabe studied briefly at the Royal College of Art, Slade School of Fine Art, 1900-5, and at Academie Julian, Paris, 1906. Offical war artist during World War I, making drawings of the Women's land army. Went on to teach at Camberwell and Westminster School of Art. Was drawing master at the Royal College of Art, then succeeded Henry Tonks as Slade Professor and head of the Slade School of Art, 1930, an apt choice as Schwabe's exact draughtsmanship was firmly in the Slade tradition. Schwabe was a prolific exhibitor at NEAC and Goupil Gallery, also showing at Carfax Gallery, Fine Art Society, Leicester Galleries and RWS. Tate Gallery holds his work. Among the books Schwabe illustrated were Walter de la Mare's Crossings, 1921; several books by the writer on dance Cyril Beaumont and H E Bates' The Tinkers of Elstow, 1946. A large retrospective was held at Chris Beetles in 1994. Lived finally at Helensburgh, Dumbartonshire.

Scobbie, Isabella M

  • S1474
  • Person

Isabella M. Scobbie resided at 120 Shakespeare Street, Maryhill while studying at The Glasgow School of Art during the 1917-18 session. Scobbie was awarded the Messers. Reeves & Sons Prize for Painting during her time at the School. She attended evening classes which were led by Miss Parker while pursuing a career as a teacher during her working hours.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Isabella M Scobbie:

  • 1917-18 (469)

If you have any more information please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Scorgie, Frederick James

  • S1280
  • Person

Frederick James Scorgie was born on the 28th of December 1893, although his birth year is also listed as 1894 in some entries in The Glasgow School of Art's registers. Scorgie resided in the South of Glasgow, at 5 Abbotsford Avenue, Rutherglen and 19 Cordiner Street, Mount Florida, while completing his studies at the School between 1908-1919. Over this period Scott undertook day and evening classes in Drawing and Painting and Architecture, while pursuing a career as an architect in his daily life. This career path saw him rise from an apprentice engineer to become a draughtsman while studying at the School. Scorgie was fortunate to have the opportunity to take classes with Alexander McGibbon, a visiting architectural teacher to the School, during his studies. Scorgie is distantly related to the acclaimed Scottish poet Robert Burns.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Frederick James Scorgie:

  • 1908-09 (589)
  • 1909-10 (589)
  • 1910-11 (546)
  • 1912-13 (691)
  • 1917-18 (480)
  • 1918-19 (262)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Additional

Sources:

Burness Genealogy and Family History, Descendants of Robert Burns

http://www.burness.ca/ld2.htm#a525

Scotland, George B

  • S448
  • Person

George Bruce Scotland was born in Airdrie on the 21st of August, 1892, one of four children of Elizabeth and John Scotland, a practicing architect. He attended The Glasgow School of Art from 1909 to 1913 as a full-time student in Architecture while completing his articles with John James Burnet. During the First World War, he served as Second Lieutenant in the Highland Light Infantry. Afterwards, he worked as an assistant architect to his father, taking over the practice until his death in 1953. George Bruce Scotland is commemorated in The Glasgow School of Art's First Word War Roll of Honour.

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: Ancestry: http://www.ancestry.co.uk; Scotland's People: http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk.

Scotland, James C

  • S1475
  • Person

James C Scotland was born on the 3rd of March 1895, residing at Mossgiel, Airdrie while completing his studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scotland studied on and off at the School between 1915-1926. He undertook day and evening classes in architecture.

It is likely that he was related to Scottish Architect John Scotland, and his son George Bruce Scotland who attended the School a few years before James joined and is featured on the Roll of Honour. This conclusion can be reached as they are all listed as sharing the same address at Mossgiel, Airdrie. However, there is no mention by name of James Scotland in the biography of John Scotland that can be accessed through the online Dictionary of Scottish Architects.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, James C Scotland:

  • 1915-16 (519)
  • 1917-18 (509)
  • 1918-19 (501)
  • 1919-20 (539)
  • 1921-22 (523)
  • 1922-23 (532)
  • 1923-24 (582)
  • 1925-26 (566)

If you have any more information please don't hesitate to get in touch.

Sources: Dictionary of Scottish Architects - http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/architect_full.php?id=100055

Scott, Alexander Thomson

  • P252
  • Person
  • 1887-1962

Alexander Thomson Scott was born on 31 August 1887 and educated at Stirling High School from 1903 to 1905. Thereafter he attended classes at the Glasgow School of Architecture and Royal Technical College under Eugène Bourdon, Alexander McGibbon and Charles Gourlay. During the period of his studies he spent two years in the office of Alexander Nisbet Paterson, from 1906 to 1908. He received his diploma in 1911 and spent the remainder of that year travelling in Italy, subsequently pursuing a postgraduate course at the School. In 1912 he moved to London where he joined James Miller as second assistant, leaving him the following year to work for the landscape architect Thomas Hayton Mawson on the city planning of Athens, Calgary and Banff, and moving again a year later to the office of Sir Herbert Baker. He left Baker's practice for military service soon afterwards, on the outbreak of the First World War, but returned in 1918 and was promoted to chief assistant in 1922. In 1929 Scott and Baker entered a working partnership, although the firm's name did not become Sir Herbert Baker & A T Scott until 1931. Scott had been admitted FRIBA on 3 November of the intervening year, his proposers being Baker, Francis William Troup and Thomas Smith Tait; his nomination papers note that he had made a return trip to Italy by that point, as well as travelling in Spain and visiting New York once and India twice on Baker's business, collaborating with Baker on the government buildings in Delhi and on bank buildings in South Africa. When Baker died in 1946 Scott went into partnership with Vernon Helbing, remaining in practice with him until his death in 1962.

Scott, Allison Gladys

  • S1285
  • Person

Allison Gladys Scott was born on the 20th of December 1897, residing at 1 Woodrow Circus, Pollockshields while completing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott studied at the School from 1915-1920, during this time she undertook day classes in Drawing and Painting, and Fashion in the Design Department. Classes were largely held in rooms 30, 29 and the needlework room.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Allison Gladys Scott:

  • 1915-16 (164)
  • 1916-17 (143)
  • 1917-18 (132)
  • 1918-19 (151)
  • 1919-20 (577)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, Allison R

  • S1284
  • Person

Allison R. Scott was born on the 19th of November 1988, residing at 2 Adamswell Street in Springburn to the North of Glasgow while completing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott attended evening classes at the School from 1914-16 while pursuing a career as a certified teacher during her daily life.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Allison R Scott:

  • 1914-15 (654)
  • 1915-16 (459)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, Andy

  • S852
  • Person

Andy Scott studied Fine Art Sculpture at GSA and graduated in 1986. He modelled in the 1985 fashion show and won a scholarship for a further year's study in Glasgow, in session 1985-86. He also won the Governor's fund Award for special merit in session 1982-83.

He is famous worldwide for his large, steel sculptures including the Kelpies at the Helix Park at Grangemouth (2013) and the Arria statue at Cumbernauld (2010).

Sources: GSA Annual Report 1982-83 and 1985-86 GOV/1/11 and GOV/1/12; Andy Scott Sculptor http://www.andyscottsculptor.com; AxisWeb https://www.axisweb.org/p/andyscott/; BBC http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-11063468, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-tayside-central-25124730

Scott, Anne

  • P14
  • Person
  • fl 1956-2002

Anne Scott (fl 1956-2002) was a graduate of Edinburgh College of Art, and was well known at the time for her dolls.

Scott, Caroline

  • S853
  • Person

Caroline Scott studied Printed Textiles at GSA and graduated in 1987. She modelled in the 1985 and 86 fashion shows.

Caroline went on to train as an architect and as at July 2017, is a Project Manager for NVA, who install public art including light displays and events, as well as more permanent works.

Sources: LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com; NVA http://nva.org.uk/about/

Scott, Charles H

  • S449
  • Person

Charles Hepburn Scott was born in Loudon, Ayr, on the 29th of November 1886, the son of Robert Hepburn and Jean (née Carmichael) Scott. He attended classes in drawing and painting at The Glasgow School of Art from 1903 to 1910 while working as a letter artist and art teacher. In 1912 he emigrated to Canada, where he was appointed as Art Supervisor for Calgary Schools before settling in Vancouver where he worked as Art Supervisor for Vancouver Schools. In 1915 he enlisted to fight for the Canadian Forces and served oversees. He returned to Vancouver after the war and became a founding member of the British Columbian Arts League in 1919, lobbying for the establishment of an art school and gallery in Vancouver. In 1935 the Vancouver School of Decorative and Applied Art (now Emily Carr University of Art and Design) was opened with Scott as its principal until 1952. He was also instrumental in the acquisition of the Vancouver Art Gallery's permanent collection. Scott continued to produce his own work throughout this period. He died in Vancouver in 1964 at the age of 78. Charles H Scott is listed on The Glasgow School of Art's World War One Roll of Honour.

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: Canadian Heritage Information Network: http://www.rcip-chin.gc.ca; Vancouver Art Gallery publication: http://projects.vanartgallery.bc.ca/publications/75years/pdf/Scott_Charles_53.pdf.

Scott, Elinor Mowray

  • S1283
  • Person

Elinor Mowray Scott was born on the 16th of December 1897, residing at 7 Haverlock Street in Glasgow's West End while completing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art between 1914-1916. Scott undertook evening classes in Drawing and Painting, while pursuing a career as a shorthand typist in her daily life. During her first session (1914-15) Scott was awarded a Haldane Trust Bursary for Drawing and Paining worth £1 1s.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Elinor M. Scott:

  • 1914-15 (603)
  • 1915-16 (49)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, Eric Clement

  • S1286
  • Person

Eric Clement Scott was born in 1876, residing at 40 Edgehill Road in Glasgow's West End while completing his studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott undertook evening classes in Drawing and Painting, including Life Drawing, between 1915-1918 at the School, while pursuing a career as an editor in his daily life. Classes were largely taken in rooms 43 and 45 of the School.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Eric Clement Scott:

  • 1915-16 (447)
  • 1916-17 (294)
  • 1917-18 (236)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, Isobel Maclagan

  • P347
  • Person
  • fl c1920s

Glasgow etcher and designer, born 9th of October 1900 and trained at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott resided at Errol, 25 Hamilton Drive (now Hamilton Avenue), Pollokshields to the South of Glasgow, while completing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art. She undertook day classes in Drawing & Painting during 1918-19, with registration number 99, and went on to study for another 6 years up to 1924/25, studying Drawing & Painting, Design and Etching.

She exhibited RGI and RSA in 1925 from 25 Hamilton Drive, Glasgow, with a piece entitled 'Winter'.

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, James

  • S450
  • Person

James Scott was born in Maryhill, Glasgow in 28th October 1889, the child of Catherine B Scott (née Thompson) and Charles G Scott, a draper. Scott attended The Glasgow School of Art from 1908 to 1913 as an evening student of drawing and painting, during which time he worked as a draper. During the First World War, Scott served as a Private in the Highland Light Infantry regiment. He died in action in the Battle of the Somme, on the 2nd November 1916. Scott is commemorated on The Glasgow School of Art's First World War Roll of Honour.

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: the Dictionary of Scottish Art and Architecture by Peter J M McEwan; the Commonwealth War Graves Commission: http://www.cwgc.org; Scotland's People: http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk.

Scott, Jean N.

  • S1289
  • Person

Jean N. Scott was born in 1898 and resided at 13 Hanover Avenue, Jordanhill to the West of Glasgow, while completing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott undertook evening classes in Fashion Plate during 1918-19. During this time her profession was listed as Shorthand Typist

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number Jean N. Scott:

  • 1918-19 (255)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, John David

  • S1282
  • Person

John David Scott was born on the 2nd of March 1895, residing at 323 Allison Street, Crosshill to the South of Glasgow, while completing his studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott undertook day classes in Drawing and Painting during 1914-15.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, John David Scott:

  • 1914-15 (462)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, John Oldrid

  • P282
  • Person
  • 1841-1913

John Oldrid Scott was born in 1841, the second son of George Gilbert Scott (later Sir, born 1811). He was articled to his father in 1860, becoming principal assistant by the later 1860s. Although in increasingly fragile health following a stroke and family bereavements, George Gilbert Scott remained firmly in charge of the practice until his sudden death from a heart attack on 27 March 1878. Despite having had no formal partnership with his father, John Oldrid Scott inherited the practice, and was admitted FRIBA on 2 December that same year, his proposers being Charles Barry Junior, George Edmund Street and Benjamin Ferrey. He completed his father's Scottish projects, modifying the design of the spire at the University of Glasgow and acting as consultant for new buildings at the university until 1901. He died on 30 May 1913. In his later years John Oldrid Scott was assisted by his son Charles Marriot Oldrid Scott, born in 1880.

Scott, Josephine Mary C

  • S1287
  • Person

Josephine Mary C. Scott attended The Glasgow School of Art between 1917-18 while residing at 40 Edgehill Road, Broomhill in the West End of Glasgow. During her time at the School she completed evening classes in Drawing and Painting.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Josephine Mary C. Scott:

1917-18 (415)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, Mary Auld

  • S1281
  • Person

Mary Auld Scott was born on the 24th of July 1895, although her birth year is also listed as 1896 in some entries in The Glasgow School of Art's registers. Over the course of her studies she resided at a variety of addresses in Glasgow's West End during term time, due to the distance from her home the Manse of Meldrum, at Old Meldrum in Aberdeenshire. Scott undertook day and evening classes in Drawing and Painting at the School from 1912-1920, with a break in her studies between 1913-14. At the end of the 1915-16 session she was awarded the School Certificate of Needlecraft (Very Good) granted by the Governors. During the 1917-18 session, Scott received a bursary worth £10, and spent time taking classes in Animal Drawing, Costume and Pottery.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Mary Auld Scott:

  • 1912-13 (30)
  • 1914-15 (148)
  • 1915-16 (156)
  • 1916-17 (154)
  • 1917-18 (160)
  • 1918-19 (234)
  • 1919-20 (2)

If you have any more information please get in touch.

Scott, Naomi

  • P1008
  • Person
  • fl 2018-

Graduated from the GSA in 2018, having received an Outstanding Student award from the Scottish Goldsmiths Trust (Incorporation of Goldsmiths of the City of Edinburgh) in 2015. Scott went on to take up a place at Bishoplands Educational Trust in Oxfordshire from 2018 to to 2019.

Scott, Ralf Rookby

  • S451
  • Person

Ralph Rookby Scott was born in Glasgow on the 9th of September 1892, one of four children of Emily Scott (née Payne) and John Scott, a house painter. Ralph Rookby Scott attended The Glasgow School of Art from 1909 to 1912 as a full-time student of Painting, later apprenticing as a Painter and Decorator to his father's firm. During the First World War, Scott served as a Private in the 2nd battalion of the King's Own Scottish Borderers. He died in action on the 28th of June 1918 and is buried in Thiennes, France. His brother, William Peach Scott, also studied as an Architectural student at The Glasgow School of Art between 1907 and 1910 and worked as an architect with Messrs. James Salmon & Son, Glasgow. He served in the 3rd and 5th Battalion of the Highland Light Infantry and was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant, dying in Palestine as a result of wounds received in action on the 9th November 1917. Ralph and William Scott shared an elder brother, James Blair Scott (b. 1886), who was also a part time Drawing and Painting student at The Glasgow School of Art between 1903 and 1910 and worked as a house painter, presumably for the family business. Ralph Rookby Scott is commemorated on The Glasgow School of Art's First World War Roll of Honour.

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: the Dictionary of Scottish Art and Architecture by Peter J M McEwan; the Dictionary of Scottish Architects: http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk; Scotland's People: http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk. Lives Of The First World War: http://www.livesofthefirstworldwar.org Every Man Remembered: http://www.everymanremembered.org

Scott, Tom

  • P524
  • Person
  • fl c1950s-

Scott, Tracey

  • S854
  • Person

Tracey Scott modelled in the 1985 and 86 fashion shows.

Scott, Vera

  • S453
  • Person

Vera Helen Scott was born in Russia in 1877 to Lady Christina Scott and Sir Charles Stewart Scott, a British ambassador. The eldest of a family of six, she was described as a precocious child and 'the brains of the family'. Much of her childhood was spent abroad, until her family moved to London before settling in Scotland. From 1910 to 1911 she studied at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott served as a VAD nurse for eleven months from June 1915, during which time she was based at Stobhill 3rd Scottish General Hospital in Glasgow. She was then withdrawn due to 'nerves and hysteria'. She died tragically from exhaustion following an acute manic episode at Gartnavel Royal Lunatic Asylum in 1921, at the age of 43. She never married. Vera Helen Scott is listed in the School's World War One Roll of Honour.

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Archives

Scott, William P

  • S452
  • Person

William Peach Scott was born in Pollokshields on the 13th March, 1890, one of five children of Emily and John Scott, a house decorator. William attended The Glasgow School of Art as a student in Architecture from 1905 to 1911, while living in Hillhead and working as an architect. During the First World War, William served in the 1st/5th battalion of the Highland Light Infantry. He died of his wounds in 1917 at the age of 27, and was buried in the Gaza War Cemetery. His name also appears on the roll of honour in the Giffnock South Parish Church. William Peach Scott is commemorated on The Glasgow School of Art's First World War Roll of Honour. He also appears on the Glasgow Institute of Architects Roll of Honour (Student).

If you have any more information, please get in touch.

Sources: Scotland's People: http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk; Ancestry: http://www.ancestry.co.uk; the Commonwealth War Graves Commission: http://www.cwgc.org; The Scottish Military Research Group: http://www.warmemscot.s4.bizhat.com/warmemscot-ftopic5589.html

Scott, William R

  • S1290
  • Person

William R. Scott was born on the 15th of July 1898 and resided at St Kilda, Upper Dunlop Street, Tollcross to the East of Glasgow, while completing his studies at The Glasgow School of Art. Scott undertook evening classes in Design during 1918-19. During this time his profession was listed as Apprentice Designer.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number William R. Scott:

  • 1918-19 (597)

If you have any more information please get in touch

Scott, Winifred Kennedy

  • S1476
  • Person

Winifred Kennedy Scott was born on the 20th of June 1899. Scott resided at a variety of address in the West End of Glasgow including Woodside Terrace, and South of the river in Ibrox while completing her studies at The Glasgow School of Art between 1917-1928. These were presumed to be her term time addresses as the School Registers also have address in Ballinluig and Birnum in Perthshire. During her time at the School, Scott studied day classes in Design from 1917-1924. In her first year at the School she received a prestigious Carneigie Bursary worth £50.

During this time she took classes in Painting on Wood, Stained Glass, Leather Craft and Life Drawing following on. Her tutor in Ceramic Painting would have been Ann Macbeth in the late 1910s. In Embroidery, she would also be taught by Macbeth and her successors.

From 1924-1926 Scott took a break from her studies, returning to the School for evening classes in Etching from 1926-1928. In these later years her profession was listed as Art Teacher.

In 1925 Scott was elected as a member of The Glasgow Society of Lady Artists which held group exhibitions allowing female artists to sell their works.

Scott went on to be a prolific ceramic decorator and textile artist in the Arts and Craft style, with four shawls designed by her in the mid 1920's featured in the V&A's permanent collection and a number of her ceramics in the Perth Museum and Art Gallery collection. Her ceramics in particular were influenced by a love of nature and interest in ornamental design in different cultures including Ancient Greece.

Due to the rural location of her family home in Perthshire, Scott developed an interest in decorating wooden items with paint, favouring blues and greens.

Scott passed away in 1940.

Further information relating to her can be found in the pamphlet Going to Pot: Pottery in Perth & Kinross, past and present (Perth, 1992). Available at the Local & Family History AK Bell Library in Perth. https://pkc.spydus.co.uk/cgi-bin/spydus.exe/ENQ/OPAC/BIBENQ?BRN=1254273

There is an article about Winifred Kennedy Scott by Hildegarde Berwick featured in Scottish Pottery Historical Review Issue Number 15 1993 available at the University of Glasgow Library or can be ordered directly from the Scottish Pottery Society.

The Glasgow School of Art student registration number, Winifred Kennedy Scott:

  • 1917-18 (97)
  • 1918-19 (375)
  • 1919-20 (382)
  • 1920-21 (661)
  • 1921-1922 (452)
  • 1922-23 (695)
  • 1923-24 (764)
  • 1926-27 (958)
  • 1927-28 (899)

Additional Souces:

If you have any more information please get in touch.

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