Home   News   Article

Elgin veteran using art to overcome sight loss hurdle


By Jonathan Clark

Register for free to read more of the latest local news. It's easy and will only take a moment.



Click here to sign up to our free newsletters!

AN ELGIN veteran with huge artistic talent is overcoming the challenges of sight loss by creating art work.

Douglas Burke in his shed with his paintings
Douglas Burke in his shed with his paintings

Douglas Burke, 81, has created detailed paintings of locations across the country in his lifetime and even sold some of his pieces but, when he developed eye condition macular degeneration in 2007, working on his detailed paintings became a real struggle.

Douglas has now turned to an array of diverse materials to create collages, using everything from old CDs to newspaper cuttings, making his creative process and works much more vision impairment friendly.

And Douglas, who is supported by charity Scottish War Blinded, hopes the way he is experimenting shows that sight loss is no boundary to creativity.

He said: "As my sight got worse I started working on the collages. I had been using a hand-held magnifier to do anything detailed, but I found it difficult looking through that and trying to control a brush at the same time, so I started looking at other ways round to do it.

"You can use anything to create a picture. I’ve used CDs to create flowers. It’s just ideas that come to me. I see in my head what I want to create."

Douglas' collage using CDs for flowers.
Douglas' collage using CDs for flowers.

Douglas says he has been interested in art since he was a child, and wanted to be an artist when he was young, but was told by his father he needed to get a "proper job" instead.

After an apprenticeship with a painting company, he served with the Royal Horse Guards for six years before working as a postman and an experimental worker for the Ministry of Defence.

But after he suffered a stroke aged 50, and had to relearn to walk and talk, it was art that became his solace – and it’s been a big part of his life ever since.

He added: "The stroke had affected the sight in my left eye intermittently. It took me two years to be able to write my name again.

"At the rehabilitation centre after my stroke I took part in a ceramics class. Art came naturally. I find it therapeutic and relaxing."

Scottish War Blinded has also helped Douglas to attend cultural trips, such as visits to the theatre, along with other Scottish War Blinded veterans, who all have a vision impairment.

Douglas’ service history and sight loss made him eligible for support from the charity and one-to-one support from Outreach Worker for Moray and the Highlands, Mick Hilton.

The veteran, who lives alone, also attends Scottish War Blinded’s monthly lunch group in Elgin.

Douglas Burke
Douglas Burke

Douglas said: "Scottish War Blinded gives me a point of reference so I know if I want to I can ring Mick (Hilton) up.

"When I was told I have macular degeneration and the cells in my eyes are dying, so eventually I’ll just know black and white. I thought, ‘I don’t want to know that. I can see a certain amount now – if it happens, it happens. I don’t think about it.

"If you make your sight loss a problem then you’re starting to destroy your own self. Don’t worry about it. It’s about making people look at life from a different angle."

Scottish War Blinded gives free support to ex-servicemen and women of all ages, no matter if they lost their sight during or after service. For more information call 0800 035 6409 or get in touch online at www.scottishwarblinded.org.


Do you want to respond to this article? If so, click here to submit your thoughts and they may be published in print.



This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies - Learn More