CONTEMPORARY  LANDSCAPE  ARTIST

Shown below is current work available at my studio, with the actual sizes displayed below the thumbnail. For a larger image and further information, simply click on the painting.

diana mackie: A Sheeps View
90 x 106 cm
diana mackie: Above the Clouds
102 x 102 cm
diana mackie: After the Snow
94 x 120 cm

diana mackie: Change in the Weather
118 x 118 cm
diana mackie: Hebridean Islands
118 x 118 cm
diana mackie: Hill Mists
53 x 87 cm

diana mackie: Light in the Cave
60 x 60 cm
diana mackie: Moon Light
110 x 96 cm
diana mackie: Mooreland Cloudscape
123 x 93 cm

diana mackie: Stack
90 x 120 cm
diana mackie: Waterfalls 2
35 x 45 cm
diana mackie: Waterfalls 3
35 x 45 cm

diana mackie: Fence Posts
105x135 cm


diana mackie: Iris on the Beach triptych
37 x 53 cm

diana mackie: Rock Faces triptych
35 x 29 cm

diana mackie: Spring Tide triptych
29 x 35 cm

The Vegetable Patch

The Glendale Cabbage

It is said that The Glendale Cabbage derived from the wreck of a Spanish galleon.
The survivors were rescued by the folk of Glendale Isle of Skye and they were rewarded with cabbage seeds.
The cabbages grew to enormous sizes some six feet across it is told.
They proved to be a welcome supplement for man and beast.
Trade developed with Ireland exchanging cabbages for potatoes.

The walled areas where they were grown can still be seen in Glendale.
The seeds brought ashore from Spain could well be the start of all the cabbage fields of Great Britain.

Extracts from Highland Myths and Legends by George W. Macpherson.


diana mackie: Cabbage
77 x 67 cm
diana mackie: Cabbage Study
108 x 90 cm

diana mackie: More Rhubarb
67 x 77 cm
diana mackie: Rhubarb
100 x 120 cm

diana mackie: Peas
110 x 96 cm


diana mackie: Cabbage Patch
127 x 55 cm

diana mackie: More Cabbage
56 x 131 cm

Click on the individual photos for a larger view...