Winter Exhibition at Roseangle Gallery in Dundee

Dundee Art Society and Broughty Ferry Art Society are getting together for their joint Winter Art Exhibition to be held in Roseangle Gallery.

It starts on Saturday 2nd December and runs daily till Saturday 9th December open each day from 11am to 5pm with a late night on Tuesday 5th December open till 9pm. Free parking in the new large car park. Visitors are welcome to pop in and see some fantastic paintings.

Art Discounts for the Festive Season

John is happy to offer a 20% discount on all paintings and prints purchased from now till end of December. The wide variety of landscape paintings, snow scene winter landscape paintings, romantic and figurative paintings can all be seen on his website pages.

Allotment paintings

I have had two interests to pursue since childhood. I have always been interested in growing plants as I needed to be outdoors in all seasons, but then in winter I still needed something to keep me active. So painting was my perfect winter hobby. I took a career in horticulture as my day job, then painting was my main interest in evenings.

My love of growing plants was so strong that even with a big garden, I still needed more land so getting an allotment was always essential. However while looking after my allotment growing vegetables, fruit and flowers, the artist eyes were always finding interesting places that would make the perfect allotment painting. It was the untidy corner full of pots, boxes, pallets, wheelbarrows, ramshackle sheds and broken fences. So it started with my neighbor, Arthur’s plot in summer, then lets try it as a winter landscape painting, and before long where ever I went there was a perfect image needing to be captured on canvas. I have now completed nearly 30 allotment paintings, most of which are now sold, but I still have a few in the artist studio. See below and more information on my website at https://johnstoa.com/landscape-paintings-1

An Artist's Life

The Autumn Exhibition at Roseangle Gallery ran for a week showing 124 paintings, but we only sold 4. Not a great result, but then we were hit by storm force winds and very heavy rainfall with so much flooding and weather alerts for folk to stay at home, so no wonder footfall was very low.

However we keep going. My next exhibition hope was the Meffan Winter Exhibition in Forfar. I submitted two of my best paintings, Lady with a Diamond Earring and the Whisky Tasting with a fee costing £20, but they both got rejected, and no reason given.

Evening Art Classes in Dundee Autumn Session

Dundee artist John Stoa is now looking for anyone with an interest in art to come along and join his Monday evening art class. It is held in his studio at 17a Menzieshill Road starting at 7pm and ends at 9pm, with a break at 8pm for tea, coffee a biscuit and wander around the studio to chat with fellow artists and see a huge variety of paintings.

For more information check out the art classes page.

Falls of Dochart near Killin

Artists have a need to travel to seek out the best images for a good landscape painting.

In Scotland we are blessed with plenty small towns and villages full of character, rivers, lochs, the highlands, beaches along the coastline and castles everywhere. It was on such an exploration looking for the next view that I came across the Falls of Dochart at Killin. It is very well known with the best view looking upstream from the bridge. However we artists are always looking for something different so I wondered if I could get a better view down at the waters edge rather than the obvious safe one from the top of the bridge. I wanted to get close to the river as it thundered under the bridge, so I had to travel a bit up the road to gain access to the river bank, then carefully make my way down towards the bridge without falling into the water. As I got nearer the water soaked rocks got a bit slippy, but I was a bit younger in them days and had little fear. However visitors to the area got quite alarmed at this young fella scrambling over the rocks at the waters edge as it was running at full spate. Once I reached my best position I had to crouch low to get the full effect of the turbulence of the raging river. The things we artists do to get the best view!!! However after taking a few photos I managed to clamber back over the rocks to safety. Back home I had some cracking images for a great oil painting of the Falls of Dochart. We artists are always a bit critical of our own efforts and never know when to stop as the painting is finished. When down under the bridge looking up stream I noticed a young pine tree growing on top of a large rock in the middle of the river. My painting did not show this wee pine tree to good effect, so I decided to make another painting but this time in acrylics, but to show my wee pine tree as a focal point. It meant a total change of appearance for this location, but then its what we do to create variety.

The Story Behind the Painting

Arthurs Plot

Life has been very kind to me. I arrived at a very early age with an interest in drawing and painting, encouraged by my father who trained in art in Poland. Then my grannie took me in hand to show me how to grow good roses. I was hooked and eventually took a career in horticulture with art as my hobby. Things went well till redundancy loomed as the Government decided to wind up all the New Towns. I worked in Landscape and Forestry in Livingston new town, so took redundancy in 1992 and changed career to a full time artist, and horticulture became the hobby, but then I discovered saskatoons on a holiday in Canada. I got hooked on this new fruit which was unheard of in UK. Got myself some seeds and tried them out. Starting with about 10 seedlings of Smoky and Thiessen I needed an allotment to grow them so ended up at City Road allotments. Saskatoons took off and as I collected my own seeds for propagation before long I was growing them by the hundreds and selling all over the UK. However the artist in me continually saw potential paintings amongst all the dilapidated sheds, falling down fences, pallets, wheelbarrows, tubs, pots and a massive variety of plants. Arthur, my neighbour had a fantastic collection of garden debris, but the gardeners nightmare plot was the artists dream. Asked Arthur if he minded me taking a few photos. He said to hang on a bit till he tidied it up. I thought, no, I just loved it as it were in the run down dilapidated unkept condition. My first painting of Arthurs Plot in Summer was the start, but then in autumn and winter I got more ideas for further wee masterpieces. The artist brain keeps asking the question, what if this or that were to change we could come up with a massive variety of different images. Today reality in art takes a back-seat to allow our creativity to take us into unknown areas, and colour and composition become more important if they make a better image. So I just could not resist adding red flowers to the potatoes. I must now have painted a dozen images of Arthurs Plot.

Another Mild Winter

Snow never arrived in Dundee this mild dry winter so thought I would post a few of my winter landscape snow scenes just in case we forget what snow looks like.

The Creative Journey

The path through creativity is not a straight line. An artist tends to paint a very wide range of topics both to gain experience but also to find his favourite topics. Then there is the problem of style to work out. Should I paint reality, abstract or something in between. We can study numerous other artists and gain knowledge of composition, colour, drama, tone, reflected lights, which medium suits us, and how loose to finish off a painting.
Looking back over the years of my own journey, I have had numerous changes of travel as new ideas and experiences guide my progress. In childhood I just loved bright colours and this continued for many years, but as I began to mix with other amateur artists I started to feel bright colours were very unprofessional, so I slowly went into my grey period. This continued for many years till a one lady said she recognized one of my paintings in a gallery. She new it was mine as she said it was very grey. That moment changed my outlook. I went back into colour, and paintings began to sell a lot better. However my wish to improve my artwork got hampered with the need to paint accurately. If I painted a beech tree, it had to look like a beech tree and not an oak, ash or chestnut. I got bogged down with reality. It took a long time to come off that road. It was during my Loch Ard project (well over twenty images) looking for something different that I decided to paint a willow tree with bright red paint and purple and blue stems. It was very popular much to my amazement. So reality was no longer important, but it has been very hard to stay on that road as you know what things look like.

A walk around the garden

The sun came out on a bright late February day so decided to explore the garden and greenhouse to see how plants are growing and early bulbs are flowering.

Framed original art

Thought it would be a good idea to let prospective buyers see paintings in their frames so added a few photos here but more can be seen on my paintings pages

Templeton Woods on television with Amelia Fox

Templeton Woods will be the focus this week on television as Amelia Fox investigates the Templeton Woods murders many years ago.

As a kid growing up in St Marys Woods in Dundee I spent a lot of time playing in the woods, so have many great childhood memories. Many years ago I decided to paint a snow scene winter landscape in oils. So one winters day I drove up into Templeton Woods and took several pictures of the trees under a blanket of snow. I needed a big canvas for this woodland painting, but recently used a large canvas for a figure study. It never worked out so it got panted over and my young lady got buried under a carpet of snow in Templeton Woods. My snow scene winter landscape painting of Templeton Woods worked out perfectly, and you would not know that a young lady lies underneath the snow.

Festive season ends so Scottish artist gets back to work

New Scottish Beach paintings for 2023

Scottish artist John Stoa from Dundee has been busy over the festive season, so three Scottish beach landscape paintings for 2023 are Coral Beach and Taliskar Beach on Isle of Skye and another beach painting of the Silver Sands of Morar. These paintings are also shown on the landscape paintings page on the website. The Isle of Skye has always been a favourite place for John with fantastic scenery all round the island. He always comes back with plenty photos of mountains, lochs, waterfalls, harbours, boats, woodlands and clean sandy beaches. Then back to Dundee for a local landscape painting of Camperdown House from the pond which is also shown on the page of romantic paintings.

The Big Picture with Large Wall Paintings

Large Wall Paintings for Sale
Artists always get that urge to go big just for once, so when an idea for a big picture emerges just go for it. It is often a town center image with loads of detail, or just a need to use those big brushes you bought ages ago but never had a need for them, until now. The artist is forever looking at topics for his next painting. It could be a beautiful flower in the garden, a peaceful snow covered landscape or allotment shed, fence and wheelbarrow, a busy town centre, especially Edinburgh or Dundee. When deciding how to paint them, some have so much interest in them that they demand the bigger canvas. Fortunately it is now in fashion to hang a large wall art painting as the focal point in a living room. All these large paintings are available so if you wish to purchase or inquire or see them in my studio please contact me.

Allotment paintings add variety with a vibrant imagination

Allotment painting allow artists to explore their creativity by taking one topic (this one is Arthurs Plot) and seeing how many different paintings they can create. Let the imagination wander free. Nothing is off limits, not even my potatoes with bright red flowers during the summer on the allotment but then when winter arrives it is snow scene winter landscape paintings down on Arthurs plot. Then of course once we have completed an interesting range of normal sized canvases we can take the best of them to create larger wall art paintings as this market is growing stronger. Arthurs plot up at City Road Allotments in Dundee was a mess with pots, boxes, barrels, pallets, wooden planks, tiles and other allotment plot debris scattered all over the place. From the gardening point of view it was derelict, but as the artist it was fantastic as it gave us the opportunity for numerous studies as debris got moved around and in winter a covering of snow added a new dimension.

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Art Projects for Artistic Creativity

Artistic creativity in the early part of an artist’s career, has us wondering what should we paint, so we choose the topics that inspire us. I just love snow scenes, but then as a trained gardener, I find plenty attractive flowers to paint, and now with a plot on an allotment site there is plenty ramshackle sheds and fences, water butts and crops to paint. As a Scotsman I love painting our lochs and mountains, so I do numerous trips to Glencoe and Isle of Skye and bring back photos to work from.Then as a Dundonian I find plenty places to capture on canvas all around the town. Artistic creativity has no bounds. However once we decide on a topic we need to show it in a variety of views. Thus I have painted 14 Cape Gooseberries, about 15 views around Loch Ard, 20 different orchids, 20 Dundee paintings, half a dozen Forfar Lochs, and well over 100 snow scenes. Another favourite topic for me is views around my allotment site at City Road Allotment Gardens, as there is so much variety of sheds, fences, barrels, boxes and plants that our artistic creativity gets plenty of exercise.

The Forfar Loch below is still on show in the Winter Exhibition with Dundee Art Society in Roseangle Gallery, but ends tomorrow Saturday 10th December.

The two latest views of Arthurs Plot are now on show in my studio. I have now painted 8 views of Arthurs Plot, but 6 are now sold with 2 on my studio walls at home.

Visitors are welcome to pop in to see my studio gallery any time, but drop me an email at johnstoa@blueyonder.co.uk to make sure I am in.

Christmas Art Exhibitions

As we head towards the festive season, we artists join in Christmas Exhibitions, so if you get the chance, please drop into them, and see some brilliant new art for sale from Dundee's artists. There is a charity exhibition for Cancer Research in the Vision Building, 20 Greenmarket from 25 to 27 November, open 10am till 8pm, but finishes at 4pm on Sunday then Dundee Art Society is holding their winter exhibition in their Roseangle Gallery from 3rd to 10th December.Open from 11am to 4pm with more art for sale.