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Print details
Print Title Singing In The Rain
Artist Alexander Millar
Medium Giclee
Image Size 510mm x 415mm
Edition Size 495
Price - Unmounted £ 153.26 (excl. VAT)
 
Singing In The Rain - Alexander Millar
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Other Work by Alexander Millar
  Print Title Medium Edition Size Image Size Price (excl. VAT)
Artwork only Singing In The Rain Giclee 495 510mm x 415mm £ 153.26
 
Alexander Millar was born in 1960 into the small mining community of Springside a few miles outside the town of Kilmarnock on the west coast of Scotland. Life within the small Scottish village was very traditional and although he grew up in the 60’s era it felt more like the 40’s. Alexanders formative years were spent in the company of old men dressed in dark suits smoking Woodbines, partnered with large missile-shaped women decked out in headscarves and pinnies. Alexanders father worked for British Rail and he got great pleasure from simply sitting in the atmospheric steam filled stations which even today he finds are the most romantic, nostalgic places to be. Many of his most romantic paintings are set within that very atmosphere – I guess he's just a big old fashioned nostalgic romantic at heart! It therefore comes as no surprise to many that Alexander Millar's favourite film is ‘The Quiet Man’. He escaped school in 1976 and eventually fled Springside to set himself up in Newcastle-upon-Tyne. He found Newcastle had, and still has, its fair share of characters locally known as ‘Gadgies’ which fed him so much inspiration later on in life when he finally discovered his destiny as an artist. After a number of different jobs Alexander Millar finally settled down in 1988 to become a professional artist. He is completely self-taught, and after many years of developing his own style in art he turned to images remembered from his childhood and used the local Tyneside ‘Gadgies’ as models in his paintings. The past couple of years have been especially exciting as Alexander Millar's work has taken on a life of its own. Sales have gone through the roof and everyone seems to be taking notice of these solitary figures he creates. He's continually surprised to see the effects his paintings have on people, on many occasions he's had women moved to tears absorbed by a painting that evokes memories of their father or grandfather. After a number of sell out exhibitions one of his paintings was entered in the Daily Mail’s ‘Not the Turner Prize’. Ten thousand works were entered and his painting was chosen as one of the finalists which were exhibited at the Mall Galleries in London.

 
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