Light at Jacobshavn
About this artwork
Light at Jacobshavn was inspired by visits to Ilulissat, an Inuit village in Greenland, formerly known as Jacobshavn. Journeying there on a Russian scientific ship, Rae went around the Northwest Passage. The artist remarks: ‘The Jacobshavn Glacier flows to the sea at Ilulissat, a world heritage site. It is the fastest moving glacier in the world. On my first visit to the village the sea was blocked by ice, but on the second, an absence of ice floes allowed me to take an inflatable craft to the glacier. That day the clouds were as glutinous as frog spawn. Suddenly, an opening appeared in the low cloud allowing a blast of sunlight to reach down to the sea.’ Rae made sketches and studies in her ship’s cabin, creating the painting in her studio in 2016. It was included in her acclaimed exhibition Barbara Rae – The Northwest Passage, at the Royal Scottish Academy in 2018.
Updated 2021
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artist:Barbara Rae CBE RA RSA REScottish (born 1943)
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title:Light at Jacobshavn
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date created:2016
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materials:Acrylic and mixed media on handmade cotton rag paper
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measurements:109.00 x 118.00 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased with support from Brian and Lesley Knox, 2020
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accession number:GMA 5672
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gallery:
Barbara Rae CBE RA RSA RE
Barbara Rae CBE RA RSA RE
Barbara Rae was born in Falkirk, Scotland and is best known as a painter and printmaker. Rae attended Edinburgh College of Art and trained as a teacher at Moray House College of Education. She has taught at both Aberdeen College of Education and Glasgow School of Art. Best known for her landscapes...