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What’s On: Shorelines/Skylines, St Barbe Museum and Art Gallery, Lymington




NINE leading printmakers are featured in a new exhibition at St Barbe Museum and Art Gallery in Lymington.

Shorelines/Skylines examines the boundaries between sea and land, sea and sky and the skylines of urban and rural settings. It features work in a range of media including wood engraving, linocut, screen print and lithography to explore the places where the elements meet; along the British coast, in cities and suburbs or out in field and copse. Featured images range from the dramatic to the serene, reflecting diverse artistic styles and visions.

Anne Desmet - Manhattan Sun, reduction wood engraving and stencil (St Barbe Museum)
Anne Desmet - Manhattan Sun, reduction wood engraving and stencil (St Barbe Museum)

Anne Desmet RA is one of our leading wood engravers, pushing the medium in new directions. Her selection includes visions of New York skyscrapers, London during the Blitz and kaleidoscopic re-imaginings of the capital today. Brighton-based Janet Brooke uses screenprint and linocut to create strikingly bold images of its piers, promenades and wind turbines, also portraying London’s Shard and Wren churches.

Janet Brooke - Old Power, New Power, screenprint. (St Barbe Museum)
Janet Brooke - Old Power, New Power, screenprint. (St Barbe Museum)

Winchester-based printmaker Kate Dicker provides intimate and intricate wood engravings contrasted with larger-scale painterly monotypes of riverside industry.

Sara Lee - Drawing Near, Japanese woodcut (St Barbe Museum)
Sara Lee - Drawing Near, Japanese woodcut (St Barbe Museum)

Paul Catherall’s graphic and colourful linocuts of London landmarks show an awareness of Edward Wadsworth’s woodcuts but bring their own very contemporary aesthetic to the subject. Sara Lee’s Japanese-style woodcuts provide a meditative and minimalist approach to coastlines and rural horizons. Rachel Gracey’s colourful lithographs bring a painterly approach to quiet corners of the countryside and details of suburban life. Roy Willingham draws on an eclectic range of influences to create scenes of bays and harbours that encompass representation and abstraction. The screenprints of wildlife artist Kittie Jones capture the movement and hubbub of gannets nesting on the Bass Rock. Dorset-based wood engraver and linocutter Robin Mackenzie is drawn to the action of wind and wave on the striking rock structures of the Jurassic Coast.

Kate Dicker - The Needles, monotype. (St Barbe Museum)
Kate Dicker - The Needles, monotype. (St Barbe Museum)

The exhibition investigates how each artist is drawn to this subject matter and examines the thought processes and techniques that result in such eclectic responses to a common theme. Work in the Shorelines/Skylines is available to buy. The exhibition opens tomorrow (Saturday) runs until 15th March. For more information visit www.stbarbe-museum.org.uk



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