Collections

 
 

My work quietly evolved during the pandemic and I began to collect only things that delighted me. I began using what was close by. My fascination with mushrooms began with this pragmatic approach to discovering new things.

Mushrooms are themselves neither flora or fauna yet their lace like subterranean structures of mycelium are an integral means of connection. They are a doorway into an unseen world and of course are enchanting to work with.

 
 

Learning new things has always been an essential part of my practice. In 2022 I began a residency up in the Far North of Scotland to explore the possibilities of glass as a material for jewellery in a project led by Ruthin Craft Centre, North Lands Creative and the National Glass Centre.

I became fascinated by very old things, visiting cairns and standing stones. Built where the land and the sky and the sea meet, creating liminal spaces. The three realms had a spiritual significance for the Picts who lived in Scotland during late antiquity and the early Middle ages.

The small items unearthed in archeological digs, things that would have been treasured and held close also influenced the development of my work. These tiny objects reveal so much about the culture at that time. The knowledge of materials and skill involved is breathtaking. I find it incredible that the materials used to create these pieces retain their brilliance despite centuries in the dark earth. This vocabulary of glass and gold is something that I continue to explore in my new pieces of jewellery.

The resulting show ‘Earthly Treasures’ toured from the Ruthin Craft Centre to The Harley Gallery to be displayed among the historic treasures in their museum.

 

The Botanical Series

 

I began this series while attending a summer school in a Bavarian Forest. I collected cobnuts and acorns, things that felt familiar, suddenly seemed remarkable so far from home. I began to pin them together to make new forms.

 

The Box Series

 

I spent part of my childhood living in a museum. Since that time I have been fascinated by how things are protected, curated and displayed.

Made during a time of restriction, these botanical specimens were collected on walks during the pandemic.

 
 

Learning new things has been an essential part of my making process since my  Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust bursary in 2012.

Printmaking and its associated processes present intriguing possibilities to explore new ways of capturing and recording nature. As I developed a new language of making I discovered I could create work that captures the experience of being out in the landscape. Through relief mono printing and solar plate I could work with both detail and distance.

 

 

The Dome Series

 

This series of cast glass landscapes displayed in Victorian glass domes began in 2010, when I inherited an empty glass dome from my grandfather. The broccoli trees were first made for a show called ‘Remarkable Glass’ at Contemporary Applied Arts.

 
 

I am interested in the symbolism and recurrent motifs in fairy tales (glass and forests, gold and silver, thorns and knives). The plots work according to the laws of enchantment where glass plays an important role. It is used for everything from shoes and mirrors to mountains. This imagery of strong contrasts and the meaning it communicates with the viewer fascinates me.