The 18-year-old’s painting, ‘Veiltail’, was inspired by a visit to an aquarium while on holiday in Gran Canaria and is her biggest artwork to date.
It is her first work to be selected for a national exhibition and caught the eye of judges awarding the £3,000 prize, which is open to artists under 30.
The artist said: “I really couldn’t believe it. I had to read the email five times. Just having my painting accepted by such a renowned exhibition was amazing, to win this is more than my brain could conjure up.
“I’ve loved drawing and painting all my life. It gives me immense satisfaction to bring a work to completion, to pick up a piece of paper and create something where there was nothing before.”
The show brings together over 300 paintings by some of the best artists in Scotland (Image: Colin Hattersley Photography) RSW President Anthea Gage said: “Gabriela’s work was a clear winner. It’s such a dramatic painting, and for someone of her age it is incredibly skilled and shows enormous potential.
“Our hope with this award is always to encourage painting. Many young artists choose to focus on installations and electronic media and it worries me that skills such as painting might get lost. If we can encourage it in any way, we would like to do that.”
Meanwhile, a botanical artist who spent more than a year completing a meticulously detailed painting of a sprig of bramble has won the exhibition’s top prize.
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Fiona Strickland, from Falkirk, has been named as the winner of the W Gordon Smith and Mrs Jay Gordon Smith Award, which is worth £4000.
Her painting, ’Bramble’, took more than a year to finish and was made by building up layer upon layer of transparent colour with a tiny no.1 brush.
Fiona, a former principal teacher of art at Bannockburn High School in Stirling who took up botanical painting when she took early retirement, has exhibited her work in the USA and Europe, and has won the prestigious Gold Medal for botanical art awarded by the Royal Horticultural Society.
Fiona Strickland with ‘Bramble’ (Image: Colin Hattersley Photography) However, she said this prize means the most to her: “Here I’m not up against people who paint in the same kind of style, there are lots of different styles. Winning the award was a big surprise – I’m really humbled.”
She said she prefers ordinary plants to rare and exotic specimens. “It’s the overlooked things I find particularly beautiful. We tend to recognising something like a bramble or a daffodil so we might not stop to look at a painting. I want the painting to say, ‘Look at me! Have you not noticed this about this plant before?’.”
RSW President Anthea Gage said: “This is a magnificent example of how powerful the traditional approach to watercolour can be, and to make a painting with such detail on such a large scale is an incredible feat.
“Art is not a competitive sport. Everyone who has a picture on the wall in this show has done really, really well, especially non-members who have gone through the open selection process. However, it is lovely to be able to support artists with prizes and recognise excellent work.”
Gabriela and Fiona are among 13 artists to receive awards at the exhibition which recognises excellence in a wide variety of approaches to water-based paint.