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The view from The Trundle, Goodwood, looking towards the Isle of Wight in the far distance on the right. The painting has been in the exhibition ‘Ups and Downs‘ celebrating the festivals and South Downs scenery at The Stables Theatre Art Gallery, Hastings.
Image Size: 35cm x 25cm
Art Medium: Acrylic on Watercolour Paper
Painting Price: £400
Commissions Invited
Landscape Artist
Acrylics
Phone: 07763 235200
Please mention the Sussex Artists website
Email: enquiries@glenrsmith.co.uk
Website: sussexlandscapeart.co.uk
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Working mainly in acrylics, Glen seeks to capture atmosphere, mood and light in his paintings. His style is meticulously detailed and this is achieved through a combination of accurate drawing skills, followed by overpainting using pallet knife work and base colours to influence the layers above.
'Please feel free to contact me should you like any further information, buy a piece or wish to commission a painting of your favourite place.'
Chichester Art Society and The Royal Society of Marine Artists.
Halpern Gallery Summer Exhibition 2019 Chatham, Kent, ME4 4BP UK • 2 – 27 August 2019
The Stables Theatre & Gallery – Ups And Downs Exhibition 2018 The Bourne, Hastings East Sussex • 26 Mar – 26 May 2018
Twitter Art Exhibit 2018
Strathnairn Arts Gallery, Canberra, Australia • 7 – 29 April 2018
Chichester Art Society Annual Exhibition 2017
The Oxmarket, Chichester • 20 June – 2 July 2017
Twitter Art Exhibit 2017
ArtsHouse Stratford upon Avon, UK • 1 – 19 April 2017
Royal Society of Marine Artists Exhibition 2016
The Mall Galleries, London SW1 28 Sept – 8 Oct 2016
Chichester Art Society Annual Exhibition 2016
The Oxmarket, Chichester • 14 – 26 June
Visitors favourite exhibition piece – voted first and second place
Twitter Art Exhibit 2016
Trygve Lie Gallery, New York • 31 Mar – 21 April 2016
My artist practice is all about watching the nature around me. I especially enjoy growing flowers in my garden in Sussex from seed and documenting their lifecycle. Each Autumn I like to watch the poppy seed heads decay as they leave behind the most beautiful structure. I like to imagine that these structures are a window into the world of nature. Through and beyond these decayed structures is a beautiful landscape.
I am trying to highlight that the tiny flower that is beautiful in summer and rots away in Autumn is all part of the ecosystem and the wider landscape beyond; that is why I have semi-camouflaged the seed heads into the background.
Image Size: 28cm x 28cm 11″ x 11″
Art Medium: Oil on Board
Original Painting Price: £1,100
Limited Edition Prints: from £145
Commissions Invited
Horsham, West Sussex
Artist in Oils and Art Tutor
Exploring the hidden world of nature: flowers, plants and insects.
Please mention the Sussex Artists website
Email: art@claire-harrison.co.uk
Website: www.claire-harrison.co.uk
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I am an artist based in Horsham, West Sussex, specialising in oil painting of flowers and insects, sharing my passion for nature and the environment with my followers and clients.
I was aged just three when I painted my very first watercolour. My mum went into the garden and said “choose a flower and let’s paint it”. I chose a purple flower, which for those who know me, I’m generally dressed in purple and turquoise, and my paintings are often of a similar palette!
Before the computer revolution, which now appears to consume most of our lives, I spent my childhood painting and illustrating my own stories in the garden. I loved flowers and plants and most of all growing things. I think it was because I followed my father around the garden with my miniature wheelbarrow. I helped out to the best of my ability and - although I doubt whether I actually did much helping - I was inspired by the bugs, grew mustard and cress from seed on the shed windowsill, and grew Asters in a terracotta pot!
I now have my own garden of course, where I grow lots of flowers - mostly those that are based on Daisy formations. These include Rudbeckias, Heleniums, Ox-Eye Daisies and of course a lot of wildflowers, Cornflowers, Corncockles, Geraniums and Teasel. Teasel is one of my favourites because of the wildlife it attracts, especially in Autumn, where I like to see the Goldfinches feeding, pulling the Teasels over as the seeds pour out.
Looking back in retrospect, I can see where all the influences in my artwork come from - my fascination with pattern, insects and flowers. They were all part of my childhood and what I loved to do.
The majority of my inspiration comes from the local Sussex landscape and my garden. Over the years it has become obvious that the seasons are moving. Spring comes earlier and earlier and Winters are extremely mild. I believe this is an indication of global warming and so many of the scientists and media provide us with information regarding this issue, on a global scale, but what is happening on our doorstep? What invertebrates and wildflowers are threatened and how does that impact on us?
As I write this, we are currently experiencing a heatwave and my crops this year are thriving because of the exceptionally low population of slugs and snails – a gardeners dream perhaps, but also an indication of pressure on the water supply, due to lack of rain. The scarcity of these unpopular molluscs also has an impact on the birds and mammals, such as hedge hogs and thrushes that feed upon them.
I started my “Art Seasonally” blog on my website, to start documenting and comparing the changes in the local climate in Sussex. I draw what I observe each week from life and these are not only for the project, but are also used as research and inspiration for my oil paintings. To read my “Art Seasonally” blog please visit my website.
I began my career in 2001 after graduating with a Fine Art degree, by hiring a local, large gallery space without any completed art works. I had 6 months before my opening, so I needed to create some work! A loan from the bank and a course on self-employment later, I launched my career and created 40 works to exhibit. These were photographic and digitally manipulated works, as I didn’t have a studio. From the success of this exhibition, which was featured in the local press and following an interview on the local radio station, the Director of The Farnham Maltings Arts Centre at my private view, offered me a studio space - and so my art career was born!
Since then, I have exhibited in the UK and abroad, in both solo and selected group shows and I have often been featured in both public and private collections. I sell to clients in several countries including the UK, China and Canada.
I am passionate about art, nature and the environment! I also enjoy sharing my enthusiasm and experience with the local community and I run courses at Guildford Institute and teach on a one-to-one basis.
I have been teaching art techniques, how to develop creativity and how to overcome creative block to children, amateurs and fellow artists for over 15 years. I have found that the artist and their creativity is still shrouded in mystery and thought of as a product of genetic fortune. However, like any other professional, I believe that being an artist is about hard work and practice, just like any other successful business owner or athlete, therefore, I started my “It’s All About Art” blog to try and demystify the creative process, to explain why I do what I do and how I do what I do, with the objective of de-mystifying the role of the artist and motivating all those art students out there.
So many students arrive at classes saying “I will never be an artist” or that they can’t be one, because they don’t have any talent. I believe that everyone can be taught the skill of drawing and painting, but some will ultimately have a natural flair for it. For those who want to become artists, all they need is the persistent drive and motivation to do hours of practice and work to create artworks, in whatever form that may take. “It’s All About Art” blog can be read on my website.
I am inspired by the landscape around me and much of my work is based upon the plants in my garden that I have nurtured from seed. I have never grown out of the wonder of plants appearing in bare earth. I encourage insects by tending a wild area of garden which grows many indigenous plants that have self-seeded from the local landscape.
My work consists of large brightly coloured oil paintings, highlighting the miniscule on a large scale. I am passionate about colour and emphasise those that I see, which are created by the changing light during the day. I want vivid colours to glow from the canvas, because I want to show that the tiny wildflower or bright beetle in a grass verge, is like a jewel amongst the undergrowth. I explore the miniature, miniscule and microscopic, of both the floral and insect world, and I will often attempt to crawl under the smallest wildflower and photograph from below as if I am an insect looking up. I am fascinated with camouflage, and I often hide insects within my work by using tone to conceal these little creatures. Just as you need to search to find minibeasts in a field, I want the audience to pause to find all the hidden dimensions in my work. This is because the bright colours are merely the surface; I want to combine both impact and detail.
I include a lot of texture in my work; I like the underlying surface to disrupt the outward appearance of the painting. It is a metaphor for the real landscape; we see calming rolling hills or ordered equally spaced trees. There is so much that we do not see, for example, the fragile intertwined relationships between all creatures in the ecosystem.
My fascination for patterns is shown in my intricate ink drawings and watercolours, where I often depict the many spirals found within the centre of daisy-like flowers. Having studied plants under a microscope for many years, I attempt to show that they are not all that we perceive; instead I draw the intricate detail from both the microscope and the naked eye. I want to show that nature, however small, is magnificent and important. Nature is not just a vista, or a landscape, it is the interdependent relationships between all creatures, flora and fauna. Nature is a perfectly ordered mechanism that we dismiss as an overgrown landscape full of creepy crawlies, where in fact it is a complex, beautiful ecosystem of each organism reliant upon another.
“Secrets of Nature” is named to encourage people to really look at the painting closely. It is not just another landscape and flower oil painting. Within the Iris, I have incorporated a human form; it is neither flower nor human, but both.
When people see my art, I want them to see two things, the surface of the painting, a beautiful flower, a landscape, but also the environmental message that I am hinting at underneath. This is why this oil painting is pale and all the subjects are camouflaged, so that you really need to look at the painting to see it. The human race needs to begin to understand that it is a part of nature not apart from it. To appreciate nature and to save the millions of species becoming extinct, we need to recognise that all the harm we do is ultimately to ourselves. The secret to save nature, is us.
Image Size: 80cm x 80cm 31.5″ x 31.5″
Art Medium: Oil on Board
Original Painting Price: £3,250
Limited Edition Prints: from £145
Commissions Invited
Horsham, West Sussex
Artist in Oils and Art Tutor
Exploring the hidden world of nature: flowers, plants and insects.
Please mention the Sussex Artists website
Email: art@claire-harrison.co.uk
Website: www.claire-harrison.co.uk
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.
I am an artist based in Horsham, West Sussex, specialising in oil painting of flowers and insects, sharing my passion for nature and the environment with my followers and clients.
I was aged just three when I painted my very first watercolour. My mum went into the garden and said “choose a flower and let’s paint it”. I chose a purple flower, which for those who know me, I’m generally dressed in purple and turquoise, and my paintings are often of a similar palette!
Before the computer revolution, which now appears to consume most of our lives, I spent my childhood painting and illustrating my own stories in the garden. I loved flowers and plants and most of all growing things. I think it was because I followed my father around the garden with my miniature wheelbarrow. I helped out to the best of my ability and - although I doubt whether I actually did much helping - I was inspired by the bugs, grew mustard and cress from seed on the shed windowsill, and grew Asters in a terracotta pot!
I now have my own garden of course, where I grow lots of flowers - mostly those that are based on Daisy formations. These include Rudbeckias, Heleniums, Ox-Eye Daisies and of course a lot of wildflowers, Cornflowers, Corncockles, Geraniums and Teasel. Teasel is one of my favourites because of the wildlife it attracts, especially in Autumn, where I like to see the Goldfinches feeding, pulling the Teasels over as the seeds pour out.
Looking back in retrospect, I can see where all the influences in my artwork come from - my fascination with pattern, insects and flowers. They were all part of my childhood and what I loved to do.
The majority of my inspiration comes from the local Sussex landscape and my garden. Over the years it has become obvious that the seasons are moving. Spring comes earlier and earlier and Winters are extremely mild. I believe this is an indication of global warming and so many of the scientists and media provide us with information regarding this issue, on a global scale, but what is happening on our doorstep? What invertebrates and wildflowers are threatened and how does that impact on us?
As I write this, we are currently experiencing a heatwave and my crops this year are thriving because of the exceptionally low population of slugs and snails – a gardeners dream perhaps, but also an indication of pressure on the water supply, due to lack of rain. The scarcity of these unpopular molluscs also has an impact on the birds and mammals, such as hedge hogs and thrushes that feed upon them.
I started my “Art Seasonally” blog on my website, to start documenting and comparing the changes in the local climate in Sussex. I draw what I observe each week from life and these are not only for the project, but are also used as research and inspiration for my oil paintings. To read my “Art Seasonally” blog please visit my website.
I began my career in 2001 after graduating with a Fine Art degree, by hiring a local, large gallery space without any completed art works. I had 6 months before my opening, so I needed to create some work! A loan from the bank and a course on self-employment later, I launched my career and created 40 works to exhibit. These were photographic and digitally manipulated works, as I didn’t have a studio. From the success of this exhibition, which was featured in the local press and following an interview on the local radio station, the Director of The Farnham Maltings Arts Centre at my private view, offered me a studio space - and so my art career was born!
Since then, I have exhibited in the UK and abroad, in both solo and selected group shows and I have often been featured in both public and private collections. I sell to clients in several countries including the UK, China and Canada.
I am passionate about art, nature and the environment! I also enjoy sharing my enthusiasm and experience with the local community and I run courses at Guildford Institute and teach on a one-to-one basis.
I have been teaching art techniques, how to develop creativity and how to overcome creative block to children, amateurs and fellow artists for over 15 years. I have found that the artist and their creativity is still shrouded in mystery and thought of as a product of genetic fortune. However, like any other professional, I believe that being an artist is about hard work and practice, just like any other successful business owner or athlete, therefore, I started my “It’s All About Art” blog to try and demystify the creative process, to explain why I do what I do and how I do what I do, with the objective of de-mystifying the role of the artist and motivating all those art students out there.
So many students arrive at classes saying “I will never be an artist” or that they can’t be one, because they don’t have any talent. I believe that everyone can be taught the skill of drawing and painting, but some will ultimately have a natural flair for it. For those who want to become artists, all they need is the persistent drive and motivation to do hours of practice and work to create artworks, in whatever form that may take. “It’s All About Art” blog can be read on my website.
I am inspired by the landscape around me and much of my work is based upon the plants in my garden that I have nurtured from seed. I have never grown out of the wonder of plants appearing in bare earth. I encourage insects by tending a wild area of garden which grows many indigenous plants that have self-seeded from the local landscape.
My work consists of large brightly coloured oil paintings, highlighting the miniscule on a large scale. I am passionate about colour and emphasise those that I see, which are created by the changing light during the day. I want vivid colours to glow from the canvas, because I want to show that the tiny wildflower or bright beetle in a grass verge, is like a jewel amongst the undergrowth. I explore the miniature, miniscule and microscopic, of both the floral and insect world, and I will often attempt to crawl under the smallest wildflower and photograph from below as if I am an insect looking up. I am fascinated with camouflage, and I often hide insects within my work by using tone to conceal these little creatures. Just as you need to search to find minibeasts in a field, I want the audience to pause to find all the hidden dimensions in my work. This is because the bright colours are merely the surface; I want to combine both impact and detail.
I include a lot of texture in my work; I like the underlying surface to disrupt the outward appearance of the painting. It is a metaphor for the real landscape; we see calming rolling hills or ordered equally spaced trees. There is so much that we do not see, for example, the fragile intertwined relationships between all creatures in the ecosystem.
My fascination for patterns is shown in my intricate ink drawings and watercolours, where I often depict the many spirals found within the centre of daisy-like flowers. Having studied plants under a microscope for many years, I attempt to show that they are not all that we perceive; instead I draw the intricate detail from both the microscope and the naked eye. I want to show that nature, however small, is magnificent and important. Nature is not just a vista, or a landscape, it is the interdependent relationships between all creatures, flora and fauna. Nature is a perfectly ordered mechanism that we dismiss as an overgrown landscape full of creepy crawlies, where in fact it is a complex, beautiful ecosystem of each organism reliant upon another.
Image Size: 56cm x 23cm
Art Medium: Gouache
Painting Price: £40
Commissions Invited
Horsham Artist
Paintings of People and Cats
Phone: 01403 260 159
Mobile: 077 4842 5219
Please mention the Sussex Artists website
Email: rogasson@gmail.com
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My main influences are cats – the bigger the better – and humans and sometimes trying to combine the two. I keep telling myself that I must try other things and maybe one day I will.
Image Size: 20″ x 16″ overall, including 3″ double mount. Smaller sizes on request
Art Medium: Watercolour
Limited Edition Fine Art Prints
Painting Price: Please contact the Artist
Commissions Invited
Paintings in all Media
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Audrey is mainly a self-taught artist, receiving great encouragement from Art Group Tutors and Adult Education classes, where an Art 'A' Level was achieved as a mature student.
A love of flowers and nature make these favourite subjects for Audrey to paint, mainly in watercolours, but she also paints landscapes, seascapes and birds, in various media. Having mastered the art of painting on silk, she enjoys producing paintings on silk and also designing and painting silk scarves.
Member of Downland Art Society.
When living in Surrey, Audrey ran The Local Artists and was Chairman of Byfleet Art Group. She was also a member of Woking Society of Arts and was the organiser for The Local Artists, a group of 28 artists who exhibit twice a year at Weybridge Library.
As well as exhibiting with Byfleet Art Group, The Local Artists and Woking Society of Arts, Audrey exhibited her paintings on two occasions at the Showcase Gallery, Bramley and also at Bourne Hall, Ewell.
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