Curated by Min Angel / Jo Mason
Alice Neave
Themes deriving from the natural world, grief, and fertility dominate Neave’s work. These ideas have led to a preoccupation with place, limbo and a depiction of an environment one recognises but cannot name.
Alix Philippe
Alix Philippe is a Belgian painter who studied Comics at the Saint-Luc Institute in Brussels. She lives and works in London where she is currently doing the Turps Art School on site course.
Daniella Norton
‘Mis en scene’ paintings where actors are caught in the moment, the manifestations and musings on motherhood, the creative spirit at work and play, internal lives of real and imagined people made momentarily visible are the themes of Daniella Norton’s paintings.
Hannah Murgatroyd
Paused on the water’s edge, crossing a desert frontier. Wanderers and seers populate Hannah’s work, moving across territories submerged in mark and colour within a narrative of painting that pivots between interior and exterior worlds.
Jacqueline Utley
Jacqueline Utley’s work incorporates painting, drawing and collaborative practice-based research projects and events. Her nonlinear narrative paintings bring women together in imagined non-hierarchical spaces.
Jayne Anita Smith
Jayne's new series of paintings focus on themes of Feminine myth and a spiritual reconnection to our natural environment.
Jo Mason
Jo Mason works primarily with oil paint focussing on space and form to make a poetic approach to subject matter. She draws on a wide range of sources including art history and sites and symbols of transition, conflict or absurdity.
Julie Caves
Julie Caves is interested in painting interior scenes because these roomscapes are where we live our lives. Windows are a place where sunlight can enter our private spaces and we can see the world outside.
Min Angel
Min Angel’s otherworldly practice explores the tangible and the intangible. Imaginative and inventive, her work is informed by art history, museology and her study of Zen meditation, Qigong and Tai Chi.
Pippa Gatty
Pippa Gatty’s work is rooted in painting’s language and history, seeking dialogue between those works and her own. Generally dark and small in scale, her paintings document her experience of her environment; wonder, foreboding, and a nostalgia for ecological innocence.