Q&A – Jeremy Gluck

Q&A – Jeremy Gluck

Jeremy Gluck is an artist working as a neurodiverse, non-linear fine artist in digital art, film, installation and mixed media. Uncompromising works confront the viewer, encouraging a physical, sensitive, or conceptual experience of each. Radical artistic engagement is the mission statement. Embracing pre-conceptual mind-language art. 

Yurim Gough

Yurim Gough

Yurim Gough was born in Korea, a country with a historic tradition of ceramics.   Gough was a fashion designer and by the age of 30 had been designing high heeled shoes for over ten years in Seoul then in Tokyo and London.   Gough emigrated to England in 2007, the first time she had set foot outside Asia. Learning English from scratch and being influenced by the radical change in culture Gough went back to being an artist, which was always her first calling. Starting with life drawing and experimenting with other media, Gough found herself drawn to her cultural roots in ceramics. 

Q&A – Rosemary Hurrell

Q&A – Rosemary Hurrell

Rosemary Hurrell  graduated with a BA (Hons) in Fine Art in 2017.  Initially inspired by traditional needlework Hurrell’s work gravitates towards abstraction, sculptures are created using free motion machine embroidery on soluble film which is subsequently dissolved, shaped, and dried.

Q&A  Pam Glew

Q&A Pam Glew

Pam Glew is a contemporary British artist, known for her unique bleaching technique on vintage flags and fabric. Antique American quilts, brocade and old jeans are dyed black and painted freehand with mixed media paint. The portrait slowly develops in the painting process resulting in an image emerging from the textile. Glew is often commissioned by large brands including Armani, Red Bull and Microsoft, exhibits internationally and is found in public and private art collections worldwide.

Q&A Tamara Savchenko

Q&A Tamara Savchenko

Tamara Savchenko is an artist-explorer who never likes to be put in a box with the label on it.  Savchenko has experienced life in so many ways that it is impossible for her to stick to one form of art.

Savchenko has lived in four countries, graduated as a doctor and has a PhD in medicine – she has worked as a librarian, a researcher, taught anatomy in a medical school in Russia; a sales assistant, an Avon representative, a science technician and finally a science teacher in the UK.  In addition to beening a mother of two children and a wife to a successful professor of physics.