Beta Help us improve: share your feedback on our new website.

Joan Kathleen Harding Eardley

Beloved painter of Glasgow street children and expressive coastal landscapes.

Plaque Inscription

Joan Eardley R.S.A
1921–1963
Scottish artist, Townhead artist and here, putting Catterline on the artistic and cultural map
"I think I shall paint here"

A woman holding a paintbrush and looking at her canvas.
A 1957 photograph of Eardley at work in her studio © The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor SCRAN.

Location

No. 1 South Row, Catterline, Stonehaven

Category

Artists

Year

2017

Joan Eardley is one of Scotland’s most enduringly popular artists, best known for hauntingly powerful portraits of Glasgow street children and for highly gestural and expressive landscapes along the north-east coast of Scotland. Eardley was born on a dairy farm in Sussex, and studied art in London.

At the outbreak of war in 1939, she moved to Auchterarder and then to Glasgow, where she studied at Glasgow School of Art. After a six-month residency at Hospitalfield in Arbroath and a period travelling in Italy, Eardley returned to Scotland in 1949 and took up a studio in Townhead, Glasgow, an area marked by destruction and post-war development.

Eardley forged friendships with many of the children she painted: rag-clad figures amid urban dereliction evoked in what was becoming Eardley’s characteristically scruffy yet tender painting style. From 1952 until her death in 1963, Eardley divided her time between Glasgow and the fishing village of Catterline in north-east Scotland. There she was drawn to farmland and rugged coastlines, the suddenly shifting weather and wild seas.

Famously, whenever a storm was coming in, Eardley would receive a phone call in Glasgow, rush to the train with her scooter, and motor the last part of the journey from Whitehaven in order to immerse herself in the weather at its most dramatic. Often painting outside on hardboard and incorporating a wide range of materials, Eardley created an extraordinary body of work. Her paintings remain much-loved for their expressive energy, texture and deep sense of place.

Explore more plaques

View all

Madge Easton Anderson

Trail blazing lawyer and Scotland’s first female solicitor.

Groups of women at some kind of reception sit at tables decorated with flowers. There is a row of five women of varying ages in the rear of photo, along a straight table.

Alexander Bain

Inventor of the fax machine and electric clock.

Black and white portrait photograph of a person. They are wearing a suit with a bow tie, and they have a long, full beard.

Andrew Blain Baird

Blacksmith who attempted the first heavier-than-air powered flight in Scotland.

Old, sepia-toned portrait photograph of Andrew Baird. He is well dressed with dark hair and a large moustache.

John Logie Baird

Inventive engineer who was the first person to demonstrate a working television live.

Black and white photograph of a person seated behind a microphone and a bank of light bulbs. They are holding a ventriloquist's doll in each hand as if they are having a conversation.

Charles Glover Barkla

1917 Nobel Prize winner for Physics.

Black and white photograph of a person wearing a suit and tie seated at a table. They are looking into the camera and holding a large book in their hands, as if reading.

Sir Arnold Bax

Leading composer of 20th century symphonies.

Black and white photo of three people seated at a table inside a public house. All are drinking and smiling, as if sharing a joke, and the person in the centre is looking at the camera and holding a pipe.