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The
sea.
I was born, and lived for many years, in the seaside town of Brighton. As
a small child I enjoyed sitting on the pebbles with my bucket and spade waiting
for the tide to go out and the sand to be revealed. I turned the pebbles over
in my hands, listened to and smelled the sea. It was a mass of sensations
that has made a lasting impact on me.
My
work is concerned with moods and emotions, often evoked through colour
and texture. These are linked mainly to natural forms, such as rock, sand
and pebbles, often situated at the coast. |
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Artist/printmaker
Linda Nevill producing non-toxic intaglio etchings, collagraphs and monoprints.
Akua water-based inks. Current work focuses on atmospheric seascapes produced
using Akua Kolor water-based inks. Has degrees from the universities of
Edinburgh and Wolverhampton, has also taken courses with Keith Howard.
I
am an artist based in the West Midlands, England. As a printmaker I specialise
in unique, original prints and limited, hand printed editions. These are
made using traditional and innovative processes such as etching, monoprinting
and lino printing. Although I work with a range of themes, I continually
return to images and memories of the sea. I was born, and lived for many
years, in the seaside town of Brighton. As a small child I enjoyed sitting
on the pebbles with my bucket and spade waiting for the tide to go out
and the sand to be revealed. I turned the pebbles over in my hands, listened
to and smelled the sea. It was a mass of sensations that has made a lasting
impact on me. My work is concerned with moods and emotions, often evoked
through colour and texture. These are linked mainly to natural forms,
such as rock, sand and pebbles, often situated at the coast. Producing
work for a calendar and exhibition entitled 'Soul of Things Ended' for
the recycling company Bywaters helped me to focus on some of my ideas
about re-cycling and care for the environment. I enjoyed making a soft
ground etching of ferns and plants with hand drawn marks suggesting rock
strata and combined it with collaged shapes of bottles and cans made from
re-cycled papers. These commonly discarded items of litter could easily
re-cycled and the countryside preserved. I also produced monoprints including
one with a Haiku on the theme of Re-cycling. My experience of visiting
Death Valley in the USA made me very much aware of the importance of water
in extreme heat. The beautiful, warm oranges, pinks and reds of the desert
seemed at odds with the deadly climate. A wall side thermometer at a ranch
showed 100 degrees Fahrenheit at 10 am and made clear the importance of
shade and water. I was born in Brighton on the South Coast of England.
I had a happy childhood and I spent many hours sitting on the pebbled
beach watching the gulls and waves. We measured the tide by its position
on the pier which floated or even disappeared on misty days. I loved the
Brighton Pavilion with its oriental domes and I combined them with fairy
tales and stories I created. My earliest memory is of standing with my
father and looking into a field and watching a donkey roll over and over.
Straight hair was a problem and it had to be cut, curled or tied back.
I shifted position and wriggled and struggled and my paintbrush fringe
was chopped shorter and shorter. Saturday morning ballet lessons led to
wearing a tutu and dancing on stage. Sundays we often played Snakes and
Ladders or Ludo. The games were intense and hours passed quickly. Afterwoods,
I would search the garden for snakes. Once I found a grass snake on the
front doorstep, sliding into the doll's bed. I knew that animals lurked
everywhere, especially in the dark. At night, I reported all sightings
of elephants, snakes, lions and tigers to my parents who brought me a
glass of water and told me to sleep. Fact and fantasy, reality and imagination
melted together in dreams. The street I first lived in, the local 'Pepper
Box' building and images of myself as a baby all combine to make a screenprint
over printed with cyanotypes (blueprints). My digital images of memories
of my childhood link to the beach and sea and Brighton Pavilion but also
to the fantasy animals watching me through my bedroom window I also remember
the games I played, the ballet lessons I had, the agony of having my hair
cut.
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