AS A boy growing up in 1940s Springburn, George Devlin had little inclination of the artistic future that lay ahead.
AS A boy growing up in 1940s Springburn, George Devlin had little inclination of the artistic future that lay ahead.
He had no idea of the five-decade-long painting career that would see his exquisite oil landscapes exhibited all over the world, collected by major galleries and featuring on stamps for the French postal service.
All he knew then was that watching the waves of German bombers, the beaming searchlights and the shapes of the barrage balloons over the nearby railway workshops was a spectacle that stirred his creative imagination.
Biggest ever Fair attracts art eliteGLASGOW art lovers can see works by Tracey Emin, Damien Hirst, John Byrne and Pablo Picasso at the city's biggest ever art fair.The tented pavilions springing up in George Square will this week play host to 46 selected galleries from all over the UK showcasing the work of more than 1000 artists. Since it began in 1996, the annual visual art gathering has established itself as the UK's biggest contemporary art fair outside London. More than 16,500 visitors packed into the tents in 2007, spending some £1.2million on pieces of art ranging from £50 to several thousands. This year's highlights include new text-based works by Scottish sculptor Kenny Hunter (Peacock Visual Arts), ceramics by Pablo Picasso (Watermill Gallery), and work by Scottish colourist Samuel John Peploe (Duncan R Miller Fine Arts). The visual art world's more controversial contingent are well represented in prints by the likes of Tracey Emin (The Fine Art Partnership), Damien Hirst (Aberfeldy Watermill Gallery), and Banksy (David Lilford Fine Art). City gallery Cyril Gerber Fine Art will showcase works by painters Joan Eardley and George Leslie Hunter, while visitors can see prints by Alasdair Gray and John Byrne at the Glasgow Print Studio stand. l The Art Fair runs Thursday to Sunday. Open Thurs-Fri 10.30am- 8pm; Sat 10.30am-6.30pm; Sun noon-6.30pm. Tickets £6 with concessions at £4, available from www.glasgowartfair.com or by calling 08444 9999 90. |
"I found it almost like a piece of theatre," says George, recalling the days when he'd sit on the steps outside the family's flat because his father, who fought in the First World War, refused to use air raid shelters.
"Yes there was a fear, but there was also excitement.
"I knew that a bomb was a bad thing, but if a bomb fell on me then it would bounce off the cushion I had put on my head," he laughs.
Celebrating his 70th birthday last year, George is a man whose personality and artistic reach are as large and colourful as the canvases he creates.
A Glasgow School of Art graduate and former art teacher, he is famous internationally for his richly-coloured landscape paintings of France, Italy, India, West Africa and of course his native Scotland.
He was also commissioned to paint Nobel prize winner Sir James Black and by Glasgow University to paint chancellor Sir Alexander Cairncross.
Having just completed the final brush strokes on his "high wire act" of a one-off portraiture demonstration at the RGI Kelly Gallery on Douglas Street, the Maryhill-based artist is larger than life in charming the gathered visitors.
You're a nail biter? "Remember Venus de Milo!"
Someone mentions taking tiffin (afternoon tea) in India? "You don't get that in Maryhill!" laughs George.
His energy and lust for life are remarkable - traits he attributes to his returning good health.
"I'm a firm believer that there is such a thing as post-cancer euphoria," says George, who has fought two bouts of cancer and chemotherapy in five years.
"Part of that euphoria is working. Working from my point of view is celebrating living.
"I have noticed a big difference in the work since the cancer - there's much more joie de vivre.
"Certainly in terms of colour there's much more of a celebration taking place."
It's testament to George's fighting spirit and inspiring creativity that his work continues apace.
Next month he'll showcase his work from Venice at the Billcliffe Gallery on Blythswood Street, he has recently returned from India, has been invited out to work in Cape Town and has an exhibition planned for 2009 at the Scottish Gallery in Edinburgh where he will showcase his large-scale portraits.
But his first round of cancer treatment did put paid to one appointment to open an exhibition.
"I made a little joke - I wrote a letter to the organisers saying that I'm terribly sorry, but I'm now a semi-colon.
"I got this lovely reply back, saying: Dear George, thanks for your letter, sorry you can't make it, but I'd like to observe that it's much better to be a semi-colon than a full stop!' " quips George, dissolving into fits of laughter.
George refused to be beaten by a primary cancer in which he had a chunk of his bowel removed, or latterly with a secondary cancer, which meant a second major operation to remove half his left lung.
As an artist, he found refuge in his studio; a converted coachhouse at the bottom of his garden where he would go to paint or sometimes just to sleep during the blackest days of chemotherapy.
"I knew that as soon as I entered the studio, I was entering a parallel world," explains George, who found great camaraderie with his cancer friends' who swap stories and healthy eating tips.
"In that parallel world, the mess and the sickness and the vomiting were kicked into touch.
"I consider myself very fortunate in that as an artist I had access to that."
The youngest of six children, George's father couldn't work as a miner after being gassed in the First World War.
George was raised by his mother and his eldest sister Lily, who he looked on as a second mother.
Like most 15-year-old working class boys in post-war Springburn, he was expected to take an apprenticeship at the engineering works, but earning the Junior Dux of his school ("A wee swot") and the persuasive powers of his indomitable big sister ensured that he was able to stay on for his Highers.
Nonetheless, his mother was "black affronted" that, instead of studying law or medicine, George sported the beard and long hair of a Glasgow School of Art student, which he attended from 1955 to 1960 and latterly taught at from 1962 and 1966.
George's Art School dream of a career as a lamplighter (working at night, painting by day) was extinguished with new technology, so he got his PSV licence and drove a corporation bus.
"I never took the view that I could go along to the labour exchange and ask for money - I found that degrading," says George.
"Driving buses, you could write a book about it - it was another world.
A champion driver' could drive the old No 2 service from Rutherglen to Knightswood on a Saturday night without picking up a single passenger!"
Driving a bus - and latterly an ambulance and also working behind a bar - gave George the money to travel to Greece, France, Yugoslavia or Spain where his money would go further and the scenery was more conducive to the warm, beautifully-coloured painting that has become his trademark.
George and his wife Marie are honorary citizens of the village of Vétheuil in France - one of Monet's favourite haunts - and they travel extensively thanks to George's international career.
The couple have a 27-year-old daughter, Nuala, a criminal lawyer.
"We're very good pals," says George. "She's determined to get me back on the hills again.
"This summer we're planning to do some Munros, so in the meantime I've got to get into some serious training.
"Half a lung or no half a lung - just get on wi' it!"
- George Devlin's new solo exhibition, Themes and Variations, opens on April 25 at the Billcliffe Gallery, 134 Blythswood Street, Glasgow. 0141 332 4027.
TO BOLDY GO . . . FOR A SHOWCASE
A NEW breed of Glasgow artist whose work is collected by Star Trek hero Patrick Stewart is to showcase his latest work at Glasgow Art Fair.
Newton Mearns-based Frank To, above, is showing three new pieces of work following successful exhibitions in London and the United States.
The 26-year-old who paints at the Wasps Artists' Studios in Dennistoun is being promoted by the Mansfield Park Gallery.
Only Time, Rewrite and Titan are some of his most evocative works to date.
He said: "My work used to be more figurative, but my new work is more personal. People will be able to relate to what's in the paintings more."
Patrick Stewart (aka Captain Jean-Luc Picard) has so far bought five of Scot's paintings.
Frank studied art at Huddersfield University and Duncan Jordanstone College in Dundee, and previously showed work at Glasgow Art Fair with Tunbridge Wells-based gallery Fairfax.
He added: "The Art Fair shows on an international level that Scotland has a strong art reputation, with artists such as Peter Howson, Ken Currie and Jack Vettriano.
"It helps put Scotland on the map in the art world."






