Geraldine Leahy – Q&A

Geraldine Leahy – Q&A

We are delighted to introduce the work of artist Geraldine Leahy whose practice involves observations of traces and imprints in the coastal landscape resulting from natural and human activity. As she walks the coastline, Leahy explores impermanence and mutability by investigating the residual marks left in the environment following severe weather events. Her paintings seek out the unexpected in the landscape – incongruous objects and situations that are the result of natural processes and human actions

Paul Butler – Q&A

Paul Butler – Q&A

Initially inspired by the work of Terry Frost and Ben Nicholson, Paul Butler has found himself intrigued by the possibility of using simple shapes, colour and texture to create art. Butler travels widely and has enjoyed working with artists in New Zealand and Australia.  He enjoys experimenting with materials and is obsessed with the circle in all its forms.

Zoe E Adams

Zoe E Adams

Zoe E Adams is an artist late to emerge in the autumn of her life. Using her spare time to learn about art, with lessons, reading and practising, Adams is now ready to share her work.  Adams describes her style as; semi-abstract, impressionist.

Kellie North – Q&A

Kellie North – Q&A

Kellie North is an award-winning photographer and visual artist with a deep desire to connect to nature, to her audience, and to herself. North plays with texture, light, movement, and nature, to create evocative, figurative images, which are connected to the subconscious and are deeply engaging.

Patrice Sullivan – Q&A

Patrice Sullivan – Q&A

Patrice Sullivan’s work is about memory and family. Although Sullivan works from photographs, the paintings are not photorealism. The paint itself, with its restive and gestural surfaces, embodies the memory with which she sees the past. And the past is her family, is sibling rivalry, marital conflicts, divorce and adversity, and their effects.