From the easel to the movie screen, Glasgow School of Art's famous students
The Glasgow School of Art has produced many household names and had a profound impact on many of those who attended.
Journalist
Sandra Dick is a news and features journalist focused on general news and off-diary stories, longer form features and human interest. A Scottish Press Awards Feature Writer of the Year nominee and runner-up for the Nicola Barry Award sponsored by Women in Journalism Scotland, particular areas of interest span heritage and health through to renewables, wind farms and technology.
Sandra Dick is a news and features journalist focused on general news and off-diary stories, longer form features and human interest. A Scottish Press Awards Feature Writer of the Year nominee and runner-up for the Nicola Barry Award sponsored by Women in Journalism Scotland, particular areas of interest span heritage and health through to renewables, wind farms and technology.
The Glasgow School of Art has produced many household names and had a profound impact on many of those who attended.
Glasgow School of Art's roll call of former students is a journey through decades of Scottish creativity.
Scotland’s surviving patches of rainforest brought to life beneath the glow of UV light.
Growing up in the Seventies, musician Anne Wood would let her imagination take her to the places she dreamed the dad she’d never met might be.
The views from Annette George’s Highlands cottage are of an unspoiled, peaceful rural idyll, spanning lands held by one of Scotland’s ancient clans since the 13th century.
At the peak of his rock star career, ex-Marillion frontman Fish was one of the most recognised singers in the land.
With its ornate Edwardian ironwork and commanding view across the water towards Ailsa Craig, for years the grand bandstand on the fringe of Girvan’s seafront hosted to all manner of seaside follies.
The building blocks were laid down in the age of King David 1 and when Glasgow was barely more than a mere dot on the map.
Their life’s journey is spent mostly on the wing, delicate yet incredibly tough little masters of the skies, swifts travel enormous distances every year to reach their favoured nesting spot.
They’ve become known as they “takeaway funeral”, with no-frills and no mourners, they’re one way to avoid the eye-watering costs of a traditional funeral.
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