Exhibition pays tribute to Calum Colvin

Published

13th January 2020

A new exhibition at the Royal Scottish Academy celebrates the work of Calum Colvin, Professor of Fine Art Photography at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design and one of Scotland’s foremost contemporary artists.

Professor Colvin is internationally renowned for challenging the boundaries of photographic media over the past four decades. The RSA exhibition, entitled Constructed Worlds, opens on Saturday 11 January and follows on from last year’s publication of a book by art historian Tom Normand that charts how Professor Colvin’s practice has developed over the years.

Professor Colvin’s photographs are complex constructions composed of three-dimensional stage-sets, populated by everyday household objects and overpainted with subjects that relate to fine art, popular culture, global history, identity and ecology. Constructed Worlds offers visitors the chance to view some of Professor Colvin’s finest works, brought together for the first time for the exhibition.

Professor Colvin discovered photography in the 1980s under the mentorship of documentary photographer Joseph McKenzie while studying sculpture at Duncan of Jordanstone. He quickly graduated from early emotive black and white images of desolate subjects to layered installations, taken with a large field-camera, carefully composed over up to three months.

“The exhibition follows the spirit of the book in that it juxtaposes work from different phases in my career, identifying common concerns and themes,” said Professor Colvin.

“When you produce work for this amount of time it evolves in unexpected ways, so it is exciting to be able to look back at your career and a large section of the body of work you have created within one publication or exhibition.”

Professor Colvin has exhibited extensively in Europe and the United States and has worked on commissions for several major galleries, with the Scottish Parliament being among the venues to feature his work.

Tom Normand’s book, The Constructed Worlds of Calum Colvin: Symbol, Allegory, Myth, is a thematic exploration of Colvin’s photography, recognising its complexity, intrigue, erudition and humour. It was described as “brilliant” by Scottish sculptor and installation artist David Mach, who said his fellow Duncan of Jordanstone graduate was a rare example of “an artist that gives you history, myth, comedy, tragedy, pathos and drama all at the same time. Seeing one of his works is like going to the theatre”.

Calum Colvin: Constructed Worlds runs at the Royal Scottish Academy, Princes Street, Edinburgh, from 11 January until 2 February. More information is available from https://bit.ly/2RG3hHe.

Dundee City Council

Dundee draws skilled workers from a 60-minute catchment population of 640,000 and has a local population of over 140,000. The availability of a large pool of highly skilled labour is a key feature in the Dundee economy. Flexibility in the labour force is currently more prevalent in Dundee than in Scotland as a whole. All forms of labour market flexibility - part-time, temporary employment, self-employment and shift work - are widely operational within the city. Labour force stability in the city is excellent, enabling companies to plan with confidence. Labour turnover levels are less than 5% and absenteeism averages 2%.

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