Showing posts with label printmakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label printmakers. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 March 2016

Drawn to print

Over the last month or so I have had the enormous pleasure of curating 'Drawn to print' at the Printmakers Gallery, Griffin Mill, Stroud. This light and airy gallery is a small but lovely space housed on the premises of Gloucestershire Printmaking Co-operative




While we were hanging we were sustained by coffee and cake. Many thanks to Lucy Guenot for all her hard work and brilliant support.

We had beautiful, excellent quality work to hang; the printmaking community are a very generous group of lovely people.

Large scale etchings from Ros Ford RWA and Ian Chamberlain ARE

Etching and sketchbook by Jason Hicklin RE

Dramatic print by Emma Stibbon RA

Andy Lovell's gorgeous sketchbook
Smaller works by Jane Walker, Meg Buick ARE, Catherine Greenwood and Terence Millington

...and my contribution

The exhibition aims to show how drawing supports printmaking. Its been fascinating to see  such diverse approaches to drawing - glimpses inside the artists thinking.
'Drawn to print' is open until 30th March, open Mon, Tues and Thurs mornings and all day Saturday.

Friday, 4 March 2016

IMPRESSIVE INSIGHT

Insight Printmakers at the cosy and welcoming Wotton Gallery this wekend until 22nd March.


We're having a launch event on Saturday 1 - 4pm, you'll be very welcome!



The gallery has been hung very beautifully by gallery staff  Belinda and Cate, a huge thank you to them for their talented support.



Thursday, 10 July 2014

Inspirational books

I have come across some lovely books recently, all connected to nature and the great outdoors. All three books celebrate the authors own particular piece of England.


left to right: 'Gone to Earth' by Mary Webb,
 'Red Sky at Sunrise' - Laurie Lee's autobiographical trilogy
and 'Four Hedges' by Claire Leighton

Mary Webb is from Shropshire and her book is essentially a novel, however her nature writing must be autobiographical because of its sparkling clarity. It is a very romantic tale but also a tragic one; the anti fox hunting imagery throughout the book is particularly powerful.

The Laurie Lee trilogy comprises his three glorious works, 'Cider with Rosie', 'As I Walked out one Midsummer Morning' and 'A Moment of War'. The cover is wonderfully illustrated by printmaker Mark Hearld and the book is a lovely object to have as well as to read; it made it irresistible to buy. Its been lovely to read 'Cider with Rosie' while living close by to all the places mentioned.


The third book 'Four Hedges' is my new greatest find. I'd love to lend it to friends but I don't think I can give it up just now! Claire Leighton is a brilliant wood engraver and the illustrations are quite sumptuous, there are more than 80 of them in this book.

A very proud blackbird
 The book takes the reader through the creation of a garden in the Chilterns, month by month. What I particularly liked was how so many of the problems, joys and preoccupations of a garden are the same today as when the book was written in 1935.

The movement  and strain in the men as they plant this tree is so well captured
You'll see your garden in a new way and fall in love with it all over again.