Sabrina Osborne
Sabrina works mainly with video, installation, photography and mixed media assemblage. She moved to London in 2007. Since then dislocation…
Read More »
Isa Levy
Isa Levy lives in Highgate, London. The passionate and primal energy of her paintings has attracted collectors from the USA, Finland, France, Italy and her native homeland, Cardiff.
Read More »Sirpa Pajunen-Moghissi
At the heart of the creative process behind Sirpa Pajunen-Moghissi’s paintings are photographs from old family albums, taken at parties thrown in the family home some forty years ago.
Read More »Victoria King
The focus of my work explores the mysteries, puzzles, happiness, and pains of life- within the often sublime complexities of balancing composition, content, and colour within my paintings.
Read More »Connie Wang
This year my work focuses on ideas about change and relative value. Buddhists believe that our earthly challenge is to find true self. Part of this is to understand the value of everything around us.
Read More »Penny Elder
Penny Elder’s work is of a semi-abstract nature, often based on landscapes in her head as memories of the Scottish countryside and travels abroad.
Read More »Andy Murphy
I am interested in paintings about places, people, and the interactions between them. There is no specific narrative or story, or at least none that I’m consciously aware of. The subject is rather the interplay between people, objects and elements making up a scene.
Read More »Roberta Bonfield
It is through the process of creating my paintings that the magic of paint is revealed: a language to enlighten my perception of the world. Nothing is certain; each blank canvas presents the potential for discovery.
Read More »Heidi Ramsay
Drawing and painting had always been a passion and I imagined that one day I would paint again. So I have begun to explore the process of painting again,from a need to create something manually that has very different qualities to computer generated images.
Read More »Mark Entwisle
“Mark looks long and hard and with great clarity at his subjects but manages somehow to suggest the intimacy of a glance” – Tamsin Oglesby
Read More »
