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Insular art, or Hiberno-Saxon art, is the name given to the common style produced in Scotland, Britain and Anglo-Saxon England from the seventh century, with the combining of Celtic and Anglo-Saxon forms. [11] Surviving examples of Insular art are found in metalwork, carving, but mainly in illuminated manuscripts. In manuscripts surfaces are ...
William Mustart Lockhart (1855–1941), artist mainly of Glasgow-area landscapes in water-colours; John Henry Lorimer (1856–1936), portraitist and genre painter, brother of architect Robert Lorimer; Robert Macaulay Stevenson (1854–1952), painter; Robert Walker Macbeth (1848–1910), painter, water-colourist and print-maker
The Aberlemno I roadside symbol stone, Class I Pictish stone with Pictish symbols, showing (top to bottom) the serpent, the double disc and Z-rod and the mirror and comb. The Picts were a group of peoples in what is now Scotland north of the Firth of Forth, in the Early Middle Ages. [1]
Pictish art vaguely refers to artistic objects produced in Scotland north of the River Forth between about AD 400 and 900, or similar objects produced in around this region. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Scottish art is the body of visual art made in what is now Scotland, or about Scottish subjects, since prehistoric times. It forms a distinctive tradition within European art, but the political union with England has led its partial subsumation in British art .
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pictish art (1 C, 4 P) Public art in Scotland (2 C, 1 P) S. ... Scottish Artists Union; Scottish genre art;