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The Scottish Arts Council (SAC)
Collecting Initiative was launched in May 1996. Its aim was to
gift the two thousand works which formed the SAC art collection
to Scottish museums and galleries. The main purpose of the dispersal
of the collection was to make the works more readily accessible
to the public and to encourage museums and galleries to collect
more contemporary Scottish art.
The SAC collection which was begun in the 1950s, contains paintings,
drawings, prints, sculptures, installations and tapestries.
Museums and galleries had to be registered with the Museums and
Galleries Commission to be eligible to apply to take part in
the scheme.
Curators were invited to apply for works which they believed
would either enhance their existing collections or would enable
them to develop new areas of collecting that still fell within
their agreed collecting policy.
After curators from all round Scotland had viewed the works in
Edinburgh written application proposals were put forward for
consideration. The University targeted the Edinburgh School of
artists: William Gillies, Anne Redpath, Robin Philipson, John
Maxwell and William MacTaggart. We already owned
work by three of the five artists and it seemed important to
have work on display by all members of the group. Other requests
were for further works by prominent artists already in the collection
for example John Bellany, Elizabeth Blackadder, John Houston,
Alberto Morrocco and James Morrison.
The firece competition expected did not deter us from bidding
for a Joan Eardley seascape and finally requests for works by
younger artists such as Olivia Irvive and Fionna Carlisle were
also included .
We learned on 1st October 1997 what works the SAC had decided
to give the University and the list of eighteen items was impressive
giving us many of the works that we had categorised as essential
to the collection including works by John Bellany, Elizabeth
Blackadder, Fionna Carlisle, David Donaldson, Joan Eardley, John
Houston, William MacTaggart, David Michie, James Morrison, Alberto
Morrocco and Anne Redpath.
This gift hastened a planned Pathfoot Concourse Gallery and the
newly acquired works in their refurbished setting were opened
on 25th March 1998.
To view the Scottish Arts Council Bequest
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