Early 2020 saw one of its biggest challenges in recent memory. Covid-19 impacted everyone and changed the way we live and work.
This new way of life presented us with different opportunities, such as exploring our local outdoor spaces and re-engaging with nature. Many of us took walks or bike-rides closer to home. These wanders, or meanderings, were one positive thing to come out of the situation. We invite you to take a wander through these evocative landscapes, they may even inspire your next walk. This has been a difficult time, but many of us have rediscovered things that were so easily missed before.
So as the nights grow longer, and the weather grows colder, we invite you to take a step back, relax, and have a meander.
Heywood Hardy (1842–1933)
Oil on canvas
H 22 x W 37 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
William J. Kennedy (1859–1918)
Oil on canvas
H 49.5 x W 67.5 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
James Edward Phillips (b.1895)
Oil on board
H 67 x W 74.5 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
Black Beast Wanderer 1887–1890
Joseph Denovan Adam (1841–1896)
Oil on canvas
H 52 x W 35.2 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
Rain – Man on Horseback 1800–1850
David Cox the elder (1783–1859)
Watercolour on paper
H 18.1 x W 26.1 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
Leisure Moments 1874
James Lawton Wingate (1846–1924)
Oil on canvas
H 39.5 x W 29.5 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
A Northerly Breeze 1870
Joseph Henderson (1832–1908)
Oil on canvas
H 44.2 x W 74.5 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
On the Fife Coast 1860–1878
Samuel Bough (1822–1878)
Oil on canvas
H 35 x W 45.4 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum
The Landing Place, Stirling, with the Ochil Hills in the Distance 1853
Henry Gibson Duguid (1805–1860)
Oil on canvas
H 63.7 x W 90.2 cm
The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum