Alison Kinnaird

Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alison Kinnaird

Alison Kinnaird MBE, MA, FGE[1] (born 30 April 1949)[2] is a glass sculptor, Celtic musician, teacher and writer born in Edinburgh, Scotland.[3] She is one of the foremost and most original modern glass engravers in Scotland.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]

Quick Facts Background information, Born ...
Alison Kinnaird
Thumb
Background information
Born (1949-04-30) 30 April 1949 (age 75)
OriginEdinburgh, Scotland
GenresFolk music, Celtic music
Occupations
  • Musician
  • sculptor
  • teacher
  • writer
  • glass engraver
LabelsTemple Records
Websitewww.alisonkinnaird.com
Close

Portrait

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Alison Kinnaird engraving

Her application to art college having been rejected,[12] Kinnaird earned a MA in Celtic studies and archaeology at the University of Edinburgh, in the course of which she also studied copper wheel glass engraving with Harold Gordon in Forres, [13][14] having met him while on a family holiday there.[12]

Kinnaird's glass engraving works are in many galleries and private collections. She has been commissioned to create pieces for the Royal Family such as an engraved goblet for the late Queen Mother, a bowl for Charles and Diana's wedding, also a blue disc for the Emperor of Japan, and the Donor Window in the Scottish Portrait Gallery.[15] She uses lead and optical crystal. The techniques used by Kinnaird include copper-wheel engraving, cutting, sandblasting, acid etching and casting. Starting in a studio in the High Street, Edinburgh, her work won early recognition and was included in an exchange between the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and the Salzburg Fringe.[16] Later, believing that the small physical size of works produced in traditional glass engraving confines their appreciation to a limited audience, she expanded the scale of her works by using flexible drive engraving and sandblasting, combined with the adventurous use of dichroic glass.[17] More recently she has employed bonded coloured glass as her engraving medium.

Kinnaird is also a musician, a gift that led her to discover relationships between music and glass engraving, notably through designs based on Lissajous figures.[18][19] She started playing the harp at 14 and has been credited with starting the Scottish harp revival and the Celtic harp renaissance.[20]She plays, teaches and lectures on the small Scottish harp also known as the clàrsach.[21] She was one of the first acts signed to Temple Records during the 1970s and she has had eight albums released through the label.[22] She worked with the Scottish music group Battlefield Band on their albums Music in Trust Vol I (1987) and Music in Trust Vol II (1988).

Kinnaird has written many books about traditional music and the small Scottish harp. Her first book on the subject was published in 1990 and is a collection of 24 harp tunes that she arranged. Tree of Strings (1992), written in collaboration with Keith Sanger, documents the history of the harp in Scotland and is the first book of its kind. The Lothian Collection (1995) has 25 harp tunes from the big houses and great families from East, West and Midlothian all arranged by Kinnaird. The Small Harp Tutor (1996) is a book about learning to play the small harp, which covers the history of the instrument, maintaining the instrument, arranging tunes and gives useful finger exercises. The book is accompanied by a 60-minute CD, which guides the learner from novice to more accomplished player. Kinnaird's most recent book is The North East Collection [23] which features tunes mainly from the 18th and 19th century arranged by herself.

In 1997, Kinnaird was awarded the MBE for her contribution and long standing service to art and music.[24] In 2011 National Life Stories interviewed Kinnaird for their 'Craft Lives' archive. The interviews took place over three days and document her life from childhood to becoming a successful artist and musician. She has been recognised for her contributions to Scottish folk music and was inducted into the Scots Trad Music Awards – Hall of Fame in 2010.[25]

Alison Kinnaird was married to the musician, producer and writer Robin Morton until his death.[12] She has two children, Ellen and John.

Awards

Thumb
Triptych
  • 2010: MG Alba Scots Traditional Music Awards, Hall of Fame
  • 2004: Glass Sellers Award
  • 2002: Creative Scotland Award
  • 2001: Adrian Sassoon Award
  • 1998: CC Chelsea First Exhibitors Award
  • 1998: Inches Carr Crafts Bursary
  • 1997: MBE for services to art and music
  • 1987: Glass-Sellers Award
  • 1980: SDA/CCC Crafts Fellowship

Memberships

Thumb
Annunciation Doors, St Mary's Church Kenardington ©

Teaching

Selected exhibitions

Thumb
Subway Photographer, Engraved Glass
Thumb
Graffiti Artist, Engraved Glass
  • 2018 Berengo Gallery, Murano, Italy
  • 2017 Edinburgh International Festival Fringe, solo exhibition
  • 2017 Scottish Glass Society, Edinburgh
  • 2017 Celebrating 80, London Glassblowing Gallery
  • 2016 Unknown, Scottish Parliament to Kirkaldy Art Gallery (ongoing tour)
  • 2015 British Glass Biennale, Stourbridge
  • 2014 Edinburgh International Festival, solo show
  • 2013 SOFA, Chicago
  • 2013 Edinburgh International Fringe Festival, solo show
  • 2012 Luminesce, Linlithgow, Scotland, solo exhibition,
  • 2012 Fleming Collection, London
  • 2012 The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh, solo exhibition
  • 2012 Travelling exhibition, Wroclaw, Jelenia Gora, Ostrow, Lesno, Poland
  • 2011 Johansfors, Kristallmuseum, Sweden [34]
  • 2011 British Studio Glass, Coburg [35]
  • 2010 Invited Artist, British Glass Biennale [36]
  • 2009 Urban Glass, NY, USA
  • 2008 The Cutting Edge, Royal Museums of Scotland
  • 2007 Invited Artist, Visual Arts Scotland, Royal Scottish Academy
  • 2006 British Glass Biennale, Stourbridge
  • 2006 Glasmuseet Ebeltoft, Denmark
  • 2006 Coburg Glaspreis Exhibition'
  • 2005 21st Century British Glass, London
  • 2004 Psalmsong, V&A London Museum
  • 2004 British Glass Biennale, Stourbridge
  • 2004 Broadfield House Glass Museum, Dudley
  • 2002 Art for Europe, Brussels
  • 2001 Art Glass Gallery, Santa Fe
  • 1999 Kaminesky Senov, Czech Republic
  • 1999 National Glass Centre, Sunderland
  • 1998 Contemporary Applied Arts, London [37]
  • 1996 British Glass, Prague
  • 1996 Contemporary Arts Centre, Utrecht [38]
  • 1988 Solo exhibition, Coleridge, London [39]
  • 1987 Group exhibition, Galerie de Vier Linden, Asperen, The Netherlands
  • 1984 Group exhibition, Habatat Gallery, Detroit, USA [40]
  • 1979 The Bowl, British Crafts Centre, London, organised by World Crafts Council
  • 1977 Salzburg Festival, Art Gallery, Salzburg, Austria.[16]
  • 1975 Contemporary Scottish Artists, Exhibitions Centre, Edinburgh

Selected collections

Thumb
Praise Window, Dornoch Cathedral

Selected commissions

Thumb
The Donor Window, Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh

Books

  • 2013 Reflections – the Art of Alison Kinnaird, Kinmor Music ISBN 978-0-9540160-2-9
  • 2011 Life Story recorded for British Library Crafts Lives series[51]
  • 2011 Portrait of the Nation, Trustees of the Scottish National Galleries
  • 2008 20th Century British Glass, Charles Hajdamach, Antique Collectors Club ISBN 978-1851495870
  • 2007 Invited Contributor, V & A Museum, 150th Anniversary Celebration Album
  • 2005 25 Years of New Glass Review, Corning Museum of Glass ISBN 978-0872901605 [52]
  • 2003 Contemporary International Glass, V & A Pub, Jennifer Hawkins Opie ISBN 9781851774265
  • 2002 Artists in Glass, Late Twentieth Century Masters in Glass, Dan Klein, Mitchell Beazley ISBN 978-1840003406
  • 1999 Engraced Glass, Marilyn & Tom Goodearl, Antique Collectors Club ISBN 9781851493074
  • 1996 Glass Art, Peter Layton, Black, University of Washington Press ASIN B012YSKB7W

Bibliography

Discography

  • 2004: The Silver String [53][54]
  • 1994: Mac-talla – Mairidh Gaol Is Ceol
  • 1992: The Harper's Land (with Ann Heymann)
  • 1990: The Quiet Tradition (with Christine Primrose)
  • 1988: The Scottish Harp [55]
  • 1988: Music in Trust Vol. 2 (with Battlefield Band)
  • 1986: Music in Trust Vol. 1 (with Battlefield Band)
  • 1979: The Harp Key – Crann Nan Teud ASIN B003V9AAOS (Temple US Records) [56][57][58][53]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.