Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Friday 24 June 2022

Abstract seascape paintings at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists - 21 June-23 July

 

Royal Birmingham Society Of Arts Members And Associates Exhibition 21 June-23 July

I am exhibiting 2 abstract landscapes created in acrylic in this exhibition. They are very well displayed in this newly refurbished gallery in the Jewellery Quarter, St Paul’s Square, Birmingham Royal Birmingham Society of Artists Gallery

The exhibition can be viewed on-line and in the gallery in the Jewellery Quarter, Brook Street, St Paul's Square, Birmingham

Deep blue sea

Elemental


Wednesday 28 April 2021

Plein air painting at the seaside - windy but wonderful


 It was wonderful to be able to paint outdoors on the beach.  The tide was coming in and the wind was sharp but somehow battling against time, wind and tide was exhilarating, especially of months working only in my studio.

Wednesday 12 August 2020

My first trip into an art gallery since lockdown

 I visited the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists' gallery in the Jewellery Quarter today. It was my first venture into a gallery since lockdown.  It felt safe, spacious and both other visitors and the staff were wearing masks.

Celebrating 20 years at the RBSA’s current location in the Jewellery Quarter, the RBSA Anniversary Exhibition brings together Collection Acquisitions from the last 20 years alongside artwork by current RBSA Members and Associates.

In April 2000, after being based at New Street in Birmingham since 1829, the RBSA relocated to the current gallery just off St Paul’s Square.

It's an exhibition well worth visiting if you can, or it is available to view online.

Outside the RBSA today in lovely sunshine.  People were stretching out and having coffees sitting in St Paul's Square opposite.


With Garden of Wisdom woodcut in Gallery 1.
In Gallery 2 with my etching Homed and Homeless - I took my mask off for a moment for the photo as no-one else was in that gallery at that time.

There are two solo shows on the ground floor as well as a range of stylish, inexpensive jewellery, greetings cards, ceramics and other small pieces which would be ideal for gifts.

Wednesday 29 April 2020

RBSA Remote Access - A Virtual Exhibition You can see this until 15 June 2020




As you will know, galleries are closed at the moment due to Covid-19 but The Royal Birmingham Society of Artists (RBSA) is still very much active.   

Currently there is an online exhibition of elected Members and Associates's artwork entitled Remote Access - A Virtual Exhibition and you can view it until 15 June 2020.


http://www.rbsa.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/remote-access-a-virtual-exhibition/

These etchings and drypoint are on show and for sale through the RBSA

This Way (drypoint print)

From Hedgrow to hillside (etching)

Through the trees (etching)

Moon and Magnolia (etching)

Standing there (etching)

Welsh Cottages (etching)




Sunday 15 September 2019

Birmingham Art Circle - group exhibition at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists gallery, St Paul's Square from 23 September to 5 October 2019


I'm taking part in this group exhibition at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists Gallery, St Paul's Square, 4 Brook St, Birmingham B3 1SA

Birmingham Art Circle and the Shapeshifters Sculpture Group are sharing the gallery for this new exhibition.



23 September to 5 October


Sunday 16 December 2018

Meet the Artist: Linda Nevill ARBSA Saturday 16 March at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists' Gallery, St Paul's Square

I am exhibiting some etchings at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists from 
11 Feb- 30 March  and have a Meet the Artist day Saturday 16 March 11-4pm

http://www.rbsa.org.uk/whats-on/events/meet-the-artist-linda-nevill-arbsa/

Linda has collaborated with Emma Purshouse and Jane Seabourne over many years creating art inspired by poetry and poetry inspired by art. Meet Linda during her ground floor exhibition on Saturday 16th March. There will also be a live poetry performance from 2pm-2.30pm. 
In this collection of etchings Linda has explored a wide range of ideas including different aspects of landscape, still life, flamingos in captivity and football as a man’s game. She works also with contrasts to create social comment.  For example, the brightly lit clothes shop windows with their haughty, disdainful models and the homeless woman seated outside.  Or the blue, temporary tented homes set up in front of a block of flats where people live in heated accommodation with televisions and fridges and appliances.


Saturday 8 December 2018

Currently showing At the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists' gallery, St Paul's, Birmingham until 24 December 2018.


I'm currently exhibiting these two at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artist's Gallery in St Paul's Square, on the edge of the Jewellery Quarter in Birmingham, as part of the RBSA Members and Associates Exhibition - finishes 24 December.



Dark cliff - oil painting 

Snowfall Birmingham - etching and aquatint


Wednesday 5 September 2018

'The Lightning Fields' - an art installation in the desert of New Mexico

I was listening to the radio a couple of day ago and heard someone talk about their visit to the  'Lightning Fields' art installation in Quemada, New Mexico and made me think again about my visit there in 2003.

Having seen an image of the installation on the front of an art book cover, I researched where it is and how to see it and it led to an amazing adventure!

You can't just locate it and drive up to it in the desert, you have to book on-line and a maximum of 6 people can view it at any one time.  You have to meet up at an agreed time and day at an unmarked building in a very small one-street town.   Then you leave your vehicle and are taken to the installation where you stay overnight.  There are rows and rows of steel poles in the desert and they have been located in a place that has frequent lightning storms.


Here is what I wrote and the etching that I created from a sketch I made at the time.



We arrive at breakneck speed in a very large vehicle – us two and 3 strangers – on a road at first and then a maze of dirt tracks.  As we pass a small mailbox by a ranch gate we see a streak of lightning zigzag down into the dry, bare earth.  It has begun.

Eventually we arrive at the isolated log cabin.  We stand on the veranda and look around across a vast plain surrounded by mountains. When the vehicle has left there is silence.  We stare at the emergency phone which must only be used if rattlesnakes come into the house. If they sunbathe on the veranda it’s not, apparently, an emergency.  We have noted the metal lined, rat-proof cupboard for food and the lack of curtains at the windows. We are on our own until 11a.m. tomorrow.

The ground is dry and cracked and studded with sage and rabbit brush. Tufts of fine grass also grow in small circles.    It’s hot, and huge inky clouds are forming in the sky.  We take wooden chairs outside and sit looking at the 400 steel poles stretching a mile left and right in front of us -  and wait.

As it grows dark, streaks of lightning fall over distant mountains and the poles fade away. Bright  flashes of pink energy burst into the sky from  the left. None hit the poles.  Humming birds dart up close, presenting long beaks to us.

I walk out across the field, examining the patches of burnt earth, following a line of poles almost to the end.  I look back at the cabin and see a streak of lightning hit the ground just behind it.  I decide to retreat, re-tracing my steps away from the metal rows.  

I sit and wait in silence. All the streaks of colour in the sky have evened out and it’s very dark.  A coyote calls across the plain and another answers. Then a few stars shine and a small, circular patch of light struggles to break through a cloud. It finally reveals itself as a pale, crescent moon – too weak to illuminate the poles.  Constellations of stars pierce the sky and show the way to another universe.  It’s time to sleep.

I awake at 5.40am. A pale light is beginning to illuminate the silence and three of the poles from the left. The pink sun slowly appears above the mountains a hundred miles away and more and more of the poles gleam silver then golden.  Long, precise rows appear for the first time and stretch across the desert scrub into the distance.  Rabbits chase each other, birds are fluttering, a horny toad and a black beetle follow secret tracks.

Without pre-arrangement we all whisper to each other, realizing that this is the time.  We separate and observe, draw and write trying to capture the moment.

When we come together again we try to define our experience. There was no spectacular lightning show involving the poles but we had made time to observe the light, the soil, the vast sky, animals and birds which we seldom have time for in the course of our normal lives.  It had been a spiritual experience for some, a re-connection with nature for others. An aesthetic experience, a calming experience – but definitely an experience.




I'm working on some seascapes - part of a collection that will be on show at my Open Studios event 13/14 October 2018

Just a few of the paintings that will be on show at my Open Studios event... I can't show you them all on line you will have to come to see!



 Work in progress

Work in progress

Sunday 2 September 2018

Saturday 12 May 2018

Royal Academy Summer Show 2018

Ooh - I've just delivered two etchings to the Royal Academy in London for round 2 of judging.   Will they get through round 2?   I think about 11,500 were eliminated in Round 1.... I won't know until 26 May...

Royal Birmingham Society of Artists Prize Exhibition - on now and until 23 June 2018


The RBSA Prize exhibition is now on and I have two etchings which were selected by Zoë Lippett, Exhibitions and Artists’ Projects Curator at The New Art Gallery Walsall.  They are both social comments on homelessness.


Orange umbrella


Passing by






http://www.rbsa.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/prize-2018/

Linda Nevill ARBSA- I have been elected as an associate member of the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists







My 6 candidature landscape etchings.


I am delighted to have been elected as an associate member of the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists.   

Last November my proposer and seconder signed my application form, I outlined my art qualifications and experience and the RBSA juried exhibitions that I had been selected for in the last few years.  The RBSA Council approved my application.   Then in April I submitted my 6 pieces of work and an artist's statement which were hung for a week in the gallery. During the course of the week the RBSA members and associates viewed all the new candidates' work and voted as to whether they should be accepted or not.   To be accepted it is necessary to obtain 50% of the vote plus 1.  

They voted me in!

http://www.rbsa.org.uk/members-associates/election-process/


Being an associate extends my exhibiting possibilities and it is wonderful to be part of this prestigious association.

Wednesday 29 November 2017

Vote now for the Readers' Choice - Artist of the Year Competition 2018, Artists and Illustrators

I have been shortlisted for the Readers' Choice in Artist and Illustrators' Artist of the Year competition with my etching entitled 'Homed and homeless'.  If you would like to vote for me, vote now here:

http://awards.artistsandillustrators.co.uk/






All 50 shortlisted artworks will also be displayed at a special Artists of the Year exhibition held at Mall Galleries, London SW1, from 18 to 24 February, as well as receiving promotion on Artists & Illustrators’ Facebook page, seen by more than 297,000 art lovers.

The winner will be crowned Artist of the Year and receive a £1,000 cash prize, a brush bouquet from Rosemary & Co and the chance to work towards a solo exhibition with Panter & Hall, on London’s prestigious Pall Mall. 

There are other prizes too, including a special one for the Reader's Choice.


Wednesday 1 November 2017

One of my etchings has been selected to be part of the Victoria and Albert Museum's permanent collection

I'm very excited that one of my etchings, 'Bare mountain' has been selected to be part of the Victoria and Albert Museum's permanent collection.    Currently it can be seen at Morley Gallery in London but, two from this edition, will be kept in the V & A.

Printing my etching Hedgerow to hillside - the Wrekin

Once I have an image on my etching plate, this is how I ink and print it.  If I want another one, it is possible to go through the process again but the next print will not be exactly the same - it's hand printed so every print is unique.



 Etching a metal plate in copper sulphat

 Putting onto onto the plate - pressing it into the grooves with a piece of rubber


The metal plate is on a hotplate to make the ink looser and easier to wipe
 Wiping excess ink from the surface of the plate using paper (Yellow pages)

 Printing the etching plate on the press

 Peeling back the paper to check it has printed well
The final print From Hedgrow to hillside'

Many thanks to Graham Stubbs for taking the photos. 

Friday 22 September 2017

Wolverhampton Art Gallery - I'm exhibiting 2 etchings from tomorrow until 18th November



I'm very pleased to be exhibiting two etchings in this show. 

 The Opening is 12.30 in the gallery.  All welcome.

Book art - last chance to see the 'Re-Imagining the Laws of England the Wales exhibition - now at Herefordshire Archive and Records Centre

Last chance to see this exhibition

 
My artist's book 'War and Emergency' has been touring for over two years across the UK as part of the 'Re-Imagining the Laws of England and Wales' exhibition and its final exhibition is now underway at the Herefordshire Archive and Records Centre from 5 September-24 November 2017.  

A set of volumes of the Halsbury's Statutes, the accepted authoritative texts for statute law (Acts of Parliament) of England and Wales was donated to the Sidney Nolan Trust and each of these has been transformed by artists across the country into a work of art exploring themes related to the topics covered in their volume. http://www.sidneynolantrust.org/events-programmes/whats-on/re-imagining-the-laws-of-england-wales

'Metropolis' exhibition at the RBSA (Royal Birmingham Society of Artists) gallery

I'm also very pleased to be currently exhibiting in the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists' Metropolis exhibition of city life which runs at their St Paul's Square gallery until 30 September 2017 http://www.rbsa.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/metropolis-2017-sponsored-by-maguire-jackson-1/



'Homed and homeless'  etching