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Dame Elizabeth Blackadder, DBE, RA, born 1931 is a Scottish painter and
printmaker. She is the first woman to be elected to both the Royal
Scottish Academy and the Royal Academy. Born in Falkirk, she studied at
the University of Edinburgh and the Edinburgh College of Art, where she
lectured from 1962 until her retirement in 1986. Her early works are
principally landscapes, influenced by her visits to Italy, Greece and
Yugoslavia. In the 1960s she acquired a growing reputation for her
paintings of flowers, Flowers on an Indian Cloth being a notable
example. She also painted portraits, and her later work came to be
dominated by still life, often featuring cats or flowers. The
composition of her still life is influenced by Japanese art and the
backgrounds are often left blank. Her paintings sometimes also include
printed or collage elements. Her work can be seen at the Tate Gallery
and the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, and has appeared on a
series of Royal Mail stamps. She was appointed an OBE in 1982, promoted
to DBE in 2003, and is married to the painter John Houston. |