Queer Places:
The Greengate, 46 High St, Kirkcudbright DG6 4JX, UK
Dorothy Johnstone (1892–1980) was a Scottish painter and watercolourist.
Johnstone was born in Edinburgh in 1892 and grew up in Napier Road, near the Gothic Mansion, Rockville.[1] Her father, landscape artist George Whitton Johnstone RSA (1849–1901),[2] encouraged her artistic talents, and at the age of 16 she enrolled as a student at the Edinburgh College of Art. She took the Life Class with Ernest Stephen Lumsden where she revealed her talents at informal portraiture, a genre for which she became well known. In 1914 she became a member of staff at the Edinburgh College of Art.[3] From the summer of 1915, she became a regular annual visitor to Kirkcudbright in Galloway, where she would paint with other mainly female artists including Jessie M. King as part of the Kirkcudbright School.[4][5] Dorothy Johnstone, with her close friends Cecile Walton[6][7] and Mary Newbery,[8] was a member of The Edinburgh School, which reformed in 1919, a collective of gifted and progressive artists associated with the Edinburgh College of Art. During 1919 she was living in Kirkcudbright where she had an affair with Vera Holme who would go on be the 'Pankhurst's Chauffeur'.[9]
Johnstone had an intense relationship with Cecile Walton and Walton's husband, Eric Robertson, who were also part of the Edinburgh Group of artists. In 1923 Robertson and Walton's relationship eventually broke down. She and Johnstone appear to have lived together for a while and staged a joint exhibition in 1924, the same year that Johnstone married fellow artist David Macbeth Sutherland. They had a son in 1925 Sir Iain Sutherland, and a daughter in 1928. As a consequence of her husband's appointment in 1933 as head of Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen (now at Robert Gordon's University) and of the marriage bar in place at the time, she gave up her career and her students. She kept her links with Edinburgh by continuing to exhibit her portraits and landscapes at the Royal Scottish Academy, to which was elected an Associate (ARSA) in 1962.
Rest Time in the Life Class, by Dorothy Johnstone, 1923
The Greengate, 46 High St, Kirkcudbright DG6 4JX, UK
Johnstone painted landscapes and portraits, particularly of children, and her style was free and relaxed, whether using oil, watercolour, pencil or chalk.[10][11][12][13] Some of her work is displayed at the National Gallery of Scotland.[14] When she died in 1980, she bequeathed her important early painting 'Marguerites' (painted in 1912) to the Royal Scottish Academy.[15]
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