Bet Low | |
---|---|
Born |
Bet Low 2 December 1924 Gourock, Scotland |
Died | 15 December 2007 | (aged 83)
Education | Glasgow School of Art |
Notable work | Merge and Emerge |
Movement | Clyde Group |
Spouse(s) | Tom MacDonald |
Bet Low (28 December 1924 – 2 December 2007) was a Scottish figurative and landscape painter, notable as one of the Glasgow Girls, and as a co-founder of the Clyde Group.
Born in Gourock, Bet Low grew up by the Clyde Estuary in poor circumstances, influenced by the stark contrast between Glasgow's industrial areas and the surrounding Scottish countryside.
Low married, and later divorced, the painter Tom MacDonald. With her family, she regularly visited Hoy in Orkney, where the light and landscape provided fresh inspiration for her work.
Low studied at the Glasgow School of Art during the Second World War, and continued her studies at Hospitalfield House under James Cowie, who stimulated her lifelong interest in literature, philosophy and politics.
Following the war, Low was a co-founder of the Clyde Group, part of the left-wing New Scottish Group of writers and artists. Low’s early figurative work was influenced by German Expressionism, and frequently depicted post-war Glasgow settings, characters, and refugees.
Low also worked in illustration and theatrical set design at the Glasgow Unity Theatre, and created her first set design for Ena Lamont Stewart's "Men Should Weep".
By the 1960s, Low had moved on to the more abstract work for which she is now best known. Of "Merge and Emerge" (1961) Low said,
"I was trying to produce an effect of water moving over stones in a riverbed. In some parts, everything is hidden by the depth or movement of water and merged together, and in other parts where the water is more shallow, the stones appear beneath the surface again and emerge into sight"
A friend and contemporary of the poet George Mackay Brown, Low collaborated with him on the poster poem, Orkney, the Whale Islands (1987).
Low exhibited with The Society of Scottish Independent Artists, the Royal Glasgow Institute, and the New Art Club founded by J.D. Fergusson and Margaret Morris.