Edinburgh School
Main article: The Edinburgh School
The group of artists connected with Edinburgh, most of whom had studied at Edinburgh College of Art during or soon after the First World War, became known as the Edinburgh School,[5] many of whom belonged to the informal 1922 Group.[6] They were influenced by French painters and the St. Ives School.[7] Their art was characterised by use of vivid and often non-naturalistic colour and the use of bold technique above form.[5] Members included William Gillies (1898–1973), who focused on landscapes and still life, John Maxwell (1905–62) who created both landscapes and studies of imaginative subjects, William Geissler (1894-1963),[8][9] watercolourist of landscapes in Perthshire, East Lothian and Hampshire,[10][11] William Crozier (1893–1930), whose landscapes were created with glowing colours, William MacTaggart (1903–81), noted for his landscapes of East Lothian, France and Norway[5] and Anne Redpath (1895–1965), best known for her two dimensional depictions of everyday objects.[12]
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