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James Watt's paintings capture life on the waterfront.
From vast ocean-going vessels to small fishing boats,
Watt has been inspired by a lifetime living near to Scotland's famed
river, the Clyde. Painting in oil, his paintings of the last few decades
have become a pictorial record of Scotland's ship-building and coastal
history.
A graduate of Glasgow School of Art, Watt is an immensely successful
artist. His paintings are to be found in numerous public
collections and the private collections of Her Majesty The Queen and
His Royal Highness Prince Philip.
Watt always paints outside and from life. This he believes gives his
work a spontaneity and enables him to catch the nuances of Scottish
light. Watt has long had an intense interest in light and its play on
colour. "I am not a sunshine painter; I like the northern
light, skies and the Scottish winter light can give an unreal
atmosphere", explains Watt who has explored and painted the landscape
in the outer reaches of Scotland. He usually spends each summer
painting on the Faroe Islands.
James Watt has been described as a Modern Impressionist. The fluid brush strokes
and
love of colour are hallmarks of his work. He is often asked why no people appear in
his paintings. " I used to include the people who were working on the boats or
harbours but I found that they distracted the eye from the ships and boats I wanted to
feature so I simply stopped including the people"
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