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Louise Gibson Annand

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Louise Gibson Annand
Born(1915-05-27)27 May 1915
Died6 January 2012(2012-01-06) (aged 96)
NationalityScottish
Known forpainting, film
Spouses
  • Alastair Matheson,
  • Roderick MacFarquhar

Louise Gibson Annand-MacFarquhar MBE (27 May 1915 – 6 January 2012) was a Scottish painter and film-maker.[1] She was a major contributor to Scottish documentary and was an influential female film-maker in a field that was dominated mostly by males.

Personal life

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Annand was born in Uddingston, Lanarkshire, Scotland on 27 May 1915 to Emma Gibson and Walter D. Annand, both teachers. She attended Hamilton Academy where her father was English Principal. Her younger brother, Walter J. D. Annand, also attended the Academy and went on to become an aeronautical engineer and academic.

During her lifetime Annand married twice, her first husband was Alastair Matheson of Skye. After the death of her first husband, Annand subsequently married Roderick MacFarquhar, the secretary of the Highland Fund (precursor of the Highlands and Islands Development Board) and a former member of the International Brigade in the Spanish Civil War. With MacFarquhar she travelled all over the world, visiting places such as Lapland, Cuba, China, the Faroes, Russia and Barbados before he, too, predeceased her in 1989.[1]

Some of Annand's other interests included the Soroptimists, climbing - she was a member of the Scottish Ladies Climbing Club, she managed to make it up almost every Munro - and the SNP.[2]

Education and work

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In 1933 she entered the University of Glasgow, graduating in 1937 with an MA (Hons) in English literature and language. While studying for her degree Annand took evening classes in art. After university she attended Jordanhill Training College, where the College art master gave her lessons in art and encouraged her to attend evening classes at Glasgow School of Art.[1] On completing college she went on to work as a teacher in various schools in Glasgow. In the summer of 1946 she spent time at Carradale in Argyll working on the illustrations for Naomi Mitchison's novel, The Bull Calves (1947).[3] She joined the Schools Museums Service in 1949 as an assistant at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, and from 1970 to 1980 as the Museums Education Officer.[4]

Annand produced 16mm films including the first-ever film about Charles Rennie Mackintosh in 1965.[1][2] She was involved in and directed many other films throughout her life, though she dedicated a lot of time to her art as well. She first put her art-work on display in 1945 though participated in various solo and group exhibitions following. Her art mainly explores barren landscapes of unfrequented areas, mostly in Glasgow. Her style as an artist changed over time, influenced in part by The Glasgow Boys. She also painted abstracts, working with varied materials from pastels to watercolour. She produced her own publication in 1988, A Glasgow Sketch Book: A Quarter-Century of Observation, in which she depicted Glasgow architecture that was to be torn down. The last piece of art she exhibited before she died was a nude and she was honoured with a retrospective exhibition at the Lillie Gallery in Milngavie when she was 90.

Throughout her career, Annand was involved in arts and arts-related organisations and was Chairman of the Scottish Educational Film Association (SEFA) (Glasgow Production Group)[5] and of the Glasgow Lady Artists Club Trust (becoming in 1975, the Glasgow Society of Women Artists of which she was twice elected President (1977–79 and 1988–91).) She was also a National Vice-Chairman, Scottish Educational Media Association (SEMA) (1979–84);[6] twice President of the Society of Scottish Women Artists (1963–66 and 1980–85) (eventually evolving into Visual Arts Scotland) and a Member of the Royal Fine Art Commission for Scotland (1979–86).[4]

In addition, Annand was a Visiting Lecturer (1982) in Scottish Art to the University of Regina, Canada; Chairman of the J.D. Ferguson Foundation from 1982 to 2001, and twice a member of the Business Committee, General Council, University of Glasgow (1981–85 and 1988–91).[4]

In 1993 Annand was elected an Honorary Member of the Saltire Society; an Honorary Member of Visual Arts Scotland;[7] awarded DUniv by Glasgow University in 1994; and appointed MBE.[8]

Papers relating to her studies at the Hamilton Academy; the University of Glasgow and Jordanhill Training College (together with papers of her father from his time as an undergraduate at the University of Aberdeen) are deposited with the University of Glasgow Archives.[9]

Filmography

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Year Film title Credit/s
1953 At the Museum director
c. 1955 Annual Art Competition director
c. 1955 Making a Sporran in Leather editor
1956 Sauchiehall Street Roof Tops director
1957 Avantgarde Puddle director and camera
c. 1958 Application of Experiments Part 1 producer and editor
1958 Rhum and Water/ LSCC 50th Anniversary director
1959 History of Lighting director
c. 1960 Application of Experiments Part II producer and editor
c. 1962 Application of Experiments Part III producer and editor
c. 1962 History of Glasgow Tramcars camera and editing
1962 City of Glasgow director
1962 The Green of Glasgow producer
1962 Little Miss Muffet flash cards
1965 Charles Rennie Mackintosh co-director
1968 Life in the Scottish Highlands - Population and Social Problems sc. and ph.
1971 Sir William Bruce: Architect educational advisor
1973 Robert Adam: Architect educational advisor

(From the Scottish Screen archive.) [10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Obituary: Louise Annand MBE, well-regarded Scottish artist, teacher and president of the J D Fergusson Foundation". The Scotsman. 14 January 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Louise Annand MacFarquhar". HeraldScotland. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  3. ^ Calder, Jenni (2019), The Burning Glass: The Life of Naomi Mitchison. Sandstone Press Ltd., Dingwall, p. 255, ISBN 9781912240661
  4. ^ a b c Frost’s Scottish Who’s Who – Louise Gibson Annand Archived 19 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 24 October 2010
  5. ^ Scottish Screen Archive - history of SEFA Retrieved 24 October 2010
  6. ^ Scottish Screen Archive - history of SEMA Retrieved 24 October 2010
  7. ^ Visual Arts Scotland – Hon. Members Archived 14 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 24 October 2010
  8. ^ Soroptimist International, Glasgow – speakers’ profiles Archived 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 24 October 2010
  9. ^ University of Glasgow Archives – Papers of Louise Gibson Annand Retrieved 24 October 2010
  10. ^ National Library of Scotland Moving Image Archive - film credits, Louise Annand Retrieved 24 October 2010
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