











'The Courtyard' by Meg Buick
'The Courtyard'
70 x 50 cm
Oil, Pencil and Varnish on Paper (Zerkal Mounted on Somerset)
2024
£1000
Bespoke framing available for Greater London collectors only | Lead time is 8 weeks from confirmation
Meg is a painter and printmaker based in Scotland. Her work is deeply rooted in a daily practice of drawing from life. Through motifs of landscape and the animal/human form, and landscapes which are at once real and imagined, her work explores collective memory and subconscious. Her paintings are informed from drawings made from life, dreams, and a deep connection with the timeless human act of painting. Stylistic references include ancient frescos, prehistoric cave art, paintings from the early Italian Gothic and Renaissance eras, folk art, and 20th-century European paintings. Meg completed a Post-Graduate in Drawing at The Royal Drawing School in 2013. Meg was awarded The Chairman’s First prize for her work on the Drawing Year, and went on to be selected for the Rome RBA Scholarship, The Richard Ford Travel Award, and election to membership of the Royal Society of Painter Printmakers. Her work has been selected for the Ruth Borchard Self-Portrait Prize, and for an exhibition at Christies celebrating the legacy of Picasso. She has recently been awarded funding from the Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust to develop her work in Etching.
'The Courtyard'
70 x 50 cm
Oil, Pencil and Varnish on Paper (Zerkal Mounted on Somerset)
2024
£1000
Bespoke framing available for Greater London collectors only | Lead time is 8 weeks from confirmation
Meg is a painter and printmaker based in Scotland. Her work is deeply rooted in a daily practice of drawing from life. Through motifs of landscape and the animal/human form, and landscapes which are at once real and imagined, her work explores collective memory and subconscious. Her paintings are informed from drawings made from life, dreams, and a deep connection with the timeless human act of painting. Stylistic references include ancient frescos, prehistoric cave art, paintings from the early Italian Gothic and Renaissance eras, folk art, and 20th-century European paintings. Meg completed a Post-Graduate in Drawing at The Royal Drawing School in 2013. Meg was awarded The Chairman’s First prize for her work on the Drawing Year, and went on to be selected for the Rome RBA Scholarship, The Richard Ford Travel Award, and election to membership of the Royal Society of Painter Printmakers. Her work has been selected for the Ruth Borchard Self-Portrait Prize, and for an exhibition at Christies celebrating the legacy of Picasso. She has recently been awarded funding from the Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust to develop her work in Etching.
'The Courtyard'
70 x 50 cm
Oil, Pencil and Varnish on Paper (Zerkal Mounted on Somerset)
2024
£1000
Bespoke framing available for Greater London collectors only | Lead time is 8 weeks from confirmation
Meg is a painter and printmaker based in Scotland. Her work is deeply rooted in a daily practice of drawing from life. Through motifs of landscape and the animal/human form, and landscapes which are at once real and imagined, her work explores collective memory and subconscious. Her paintings are informed from drawings made from life, dreams, and a deep connection with the timeless human act of painting. Stylistic references include ancient frescos, prehistoric cave art, paintings from the early Italian Gothic and Renaissance eras, folk art, and 20th-century European paintings. Meg completed a Post-Graduate in Drawing at The Royal Drawing School in 2013. Meg was awarded The Chairman’s First prize for her work on the Drawing Year, and went on to be selected for the Rome RBA Scholarship, The Richard Ford Travel Award, and election to membership of the Royal Society of Painter Printmakers. Her work has been selected for the Ruth Borchard Self-Portrait Prize, and for an exhibition at Christies celebrating the legacy of Picasso. She has recently been awarded funding from the Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust to develop her work in Etching.