Wensley Gallery

 

 

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Rosemary Abrahams

Rosemary's paintings are self referential: they are not about illustrating a concept, reproducing an object or scene, or commenting on social, sexual, or political mores. What her paintings are emphatically about is colour, in all its manifestations.

Her beautiful paintings are created with many layers of colour which give a great richness to her work, and communicates the joy which Rosemary takes in the creation of these wonderful works.

Caroline Airey

Caroline has always had an interest and talent for art, though she did not discover ceramics until 1990, having been previously 'hooked' on watercolour painting. She completed her Ceramics City and Guilds in 1997 and found the design aspect of the course invaluable as it taught her to develop her ideas into a continual progression.

Her two great influences are her former tutor, the highly acclaimed Japanese ceramist Mari Odet, nature.

Admitting that precision is not her forte, her work often leans, but this only adds to the beauty of her organic creations; as Caroline says "Nature doesn't have an inbuilt spirit level!" She finds the permutations of form and texture endless and endlessly fascinating, and that each piece spawns another, and so it goes on and on.....

 

Graham Airey

 

Graham was born in 1940 in Rochdale, and after attending Rochdale Boys Grammar School began a course in Art and Craft. He then went onto the Manchester College of Art studying Design and Textiles, followed by Sheffield University graduating in 1961. During the ensuing years Graham has taught all educational levels, from secondary school through to postgraduate and MA level.

 

He is presently involved in various teaching and art organisations, and has recenitly been coaxed into Community Education in Bolton where he teaches watercolour and acrylic painting part time to adults.

 

But, when he has the opportunity, Graham concentrates on his first love; ceramics. His motivating forces are pattern, texture and form. These manifest in sculptural representations of birds and lizards in stoneware clay, enhanced with the addition of various oxides and dry glaze. His many varieties of Owl have become widely collected and he continues to be one of the gallery's most popular artists.

 

 

Nigel Artingstall

Nigel was born in Cheshire in 1963, but soon after moved to Harwood in Bolton where he now lives with his wife and young daughter Megan.

From a very young age Nigel showed an interest in wildlife, particularly birds, and spent many hours studying the fauna and flora. He demonstrated an early ability as an artist with his pencil drawings and slate etchings. By the age of eleven he started selling his work to friends, relatives and teachers.    

Nigel spent a number of years working for a small company as a modeller of birds, unfortunately due to business pressures the company had to close but this gave Nigel the impetus to develop his painting.

The backgrounds for his work are almost entirely painted with an airbrush to give the photo realistic effect indicative of his work. The fore ground is then painted with a fine sable brush which creates an almost 3D image. During the years Nigel has exhibited with the gallery his highly detailed paintings have become collectable in the UK and abroad.

Sue Atkinson

Sue was born in Leeds, and now lives in Wakefield, West Yorkshire. She worked for the Yorkshire Weekly Newspaper group for eight years before deciding to concentrate on her painting. Sue has now been painting since the early 1990's, and in that time has become one of Yorkshires most loved and respected artists.

Exhibiting throughout the country, including at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, her work has become collectable earning her numerous awards for both her oils and watercolours. She was the 2002 winner of the Discerning eye London Exhibition for the North Region, the Gillett and Bevan Small Picture Award winner at the 2000 Manchester Academy of Fine Arts, and South Yorkshire Artist of the Year in 1999, to name but a few.

She has always enjoyed painting from start to finish on site, though now she often gathers information and impressions to mix with imagination later in the studio.

Sue says that she loves painting landscapes as they allow her to express has enthusiasm for nature, though recently she has found more and more people crowding into the picture. Her wonderful paintings can be sympathetic, often amusing, and always a joy to behold.

 

 

 

 

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