Exhibition

New Horizons

15 Jun 2019 – 27 Jul 2019

Regular hours

Saturday
10:00 – 17:30
Tuesday
10:00 – 17:30
Wednesday
10:00 – 17:30
Thursday
10:00 – 17:30
Friday
10:00 – 17:30

Cost of entry

Free

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Sarah Wiseman Gallery

Oxford, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • From Oxford City Centre Bus number 7 or 2 to South Parade
  • Trains from London to Oxford City Centre or Oxford Parkway (Kidlington)
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In an exhibition of contemporary landscape, artists explore rugged and mist-shrouded hillsides, far flung expanses of wilderness, and gentler pastures found closer to home.

About

Each of these contemporary painters is drawn to the landscape in differing ways, exploring light, texture and atmosphere through paint and gestural mark making. Much of the work is about the artists’ emotional response to a particular location, rather than painting a likeness, allowing the viewer room to imagine and explore.  

The gallery is located in Oxford, a city famously surrounded by rolling countryside, as well as having large expanses of green within the city itself, so living with nature and landscape is very much part of local life’ explains gallery director Sarah Wiseman. ‘We wanted this exhibition to reflect this, but also focus on contemporary artistic responses to landscape.’ 


James Fotheringhame

One of Sarah Wiseman Gallery’s most sought-after artists, James has established a career as a landscape gardener and artist to critical acclaim. His interest in re-wilding of landscape is very much a contemporary issue and his paintings reflect this passion to revitalise exhausted and intensively farmed land.  They have a raw, almost ephemeral quality; delicate, detailed imagery is mixed with more abstracted marks and textures. Nature is ever-changing and adapting; James Fotheringhame’s work reflect this perfectly. 
 

Elaine Jones
Elaine is inspired by wilderness, her work often taking her to remote and largely uninhabited locations. Over the years, she has visited Antarctica, Latin America and California. Using organic shapes as a starting point, Elaine pours, scratches and rubs paint over her working surface, allowing colours to mix and pool together. She says ‘My paintings evolve, a little bit like nature itself; structures are formed and then repeatedly broken down, changed, obliterated and then rebuilt.’  
 

Jane Skingley
Jane Skingley is drawn to wide, expansive skies and dramatic cloud formations, but also more hidden forested pockets of landscape, sheltered by trees and filtered light.
‘My work is about capturing moments,’ she says ‘It could be the beach that I went to as a child, or on a family holiday, or the view from my daily country walk. Images may be based on a fleeting memory or a place that is visited over and over, each time seeing something different.’
 

Zoë Taylor
Using oil and wax on aluminium panel, Zoë’s work is a response raw emotional power of the land, its intense elemental energy and unpredictability. Using lavish, gestural marks, she describes a dramatic landscape from an almost elevated perspective, so the viewer feels as though they are standing upon a high view point. She hopes these images will key into a personal bank of landscape memory held by the viewer.
‘I don’t tell the viewer where they are [painted from], it is for them to feel that place and find it in their heart,’ says Zoë.

What to expect? Toggle

CuratorsToggle

Sarah Wiseman

Exhibiting artistsToggle

Zoe Taylor

Elaine Jones

James Fotheringhame

Jane Skingley

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