EDINBURGH.- A dramatic exhibition of photographs and video from the streets of Crieff will be held in the IT Gallery of the
National Gallery of Scotland this winter. Wild Rovers documents a partnership project organized by the National Galleries of Scotland and Perth & Kinross Council to reflect on the history of the Crieff area and welcome the launch of the Strathearn Community Campus.
Inspired by paintings of the Highland landscape and its cattle by Victorian artist Peter Graham - from the National Gallery of Scotland and Perth Museum and Art Gallery collections - local residents and school students, aided by artist Gavin Lockhart, created flags, surreal digital photographs and a dramatic community stampede' mark the passage of Crieff from its past on an ongoing journey to the future. Using masks as a device to see Crieff through the eyes of the cattle formerly brought to the market, local participants met the challenge to see things differently' and enact a symbolic re-branding' of their hometown.
Wild Rovers is part of the National Galleries of Scotland Education Outreach series Parallel Lives, which aims to make key works in the National Galleries of Scotland collection more directly relevant to the diverse communities living in Scotland. This partnership with Perth & Kinross Council is the first time the National Galleries of Scotland has delivered its successful Parallel Lives outreach initiative outside Edinburgh. Through its Parallel Lives initiative, the National Galleries of Scotland is committed to working in partnership with local authorities across Scotland, using existing works of art to inspire whole communities.