Showing posts with label Zai Kuang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zai Kuang. Show all posts

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Children in Art


Eva Breuer Art Dealer is proud to present a curated exhibition of works by a vast range of artists all based around the experience of youth childhood in part inspired by the exhibition Les Enfants modèles (Child Models) at the Musée national de l’Orangerie in Paris.

Many of the artworks depict images of children themselves. Among others, Ena Joyce depicts a young woman in a plaid skirt pushing a pram under a grey sky along the banks of the Thames, John Olsen shows a girl playing with a seemingly uncomfortable cat, Sam Wade paints a group of school children waiting on a train platform and Zai Kuang captures a moment of quiet contemplation as a seated young girl stares down at a toy penguin perched on a table. In some paintings, such as Stephen Nothling’s Only Pinnochio Knows and Meg Williams’s Still Life with Pink Pig the presence of a child is only implied through the inclusion of children’s toys.


The selection of works showing children and elements of children’s worlds are complemented by paintings that appeal to children through elements such as bright colours, in the case of Philippa Blair, or through their whimsical subject matter, in the case of Geoffrey Proud and Rosemary Valadon.


Children in Art will be on view starting April 6th at Eva Breuer Art Dealer.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Zai Kuang - Finalist 2010 City of Albany Art Prize

Congratulations to Zai Kuang who is a finalist in the 2010 City of Albany Art Prize for his painting Toys.

Toys, oil on canvas, 74 x 90 cm

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Staff Picks - Gallery Administrator Ciara Derkenne

Victor Rubin (b.1950)
Physcoreal Head II
acrylic on canvas on board
19 x 23.5cm
no. 11158

Victor Rubin is represented in all major public collections in Australia including the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Queensland Art Gallery. His work has been collected by some of the most important private and corporate collections of Australian art including the Patrick White collection and the ICI collection.

Arthur Boyd (1920-1999)
Portrait of Alannah Coleman III c.1971
Oil on canvas
76 x 63 cm
no.3168

Arthur Boyd’s paintings of art world personalities such as this portrait of the art dealer Alannah Coleman, are masterfully executed expressions of the sitter. Boyd translates the nuances of his subject in vigorous strokes of yellow, blue and red, which animate the painterly surface.

Ena Joyce (b.1926)
London Child With Perambulator 1949
Oil on wood
36 x 48.5cm
no.7299

Whilst in London after winning the 1946 NSW Travelling Art Scholarship Ena Joyce painted some of her most highly regarded paintings. London Child with Perambulator 1949 is an evocative work executed with great economy and brisk brush work.

"The small girl stands by the Thames with a mud island behind her. This was at Chiswick Reach, painted several times by Victor Passmore." Ena Joyce

Ena Joyce is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, most state galleries, many regional galleries as well as many other public collections throughout Australia including the Parliament House collection. She has won numerous coveted awards including the 1977 Portia Geach Memorila Prize.

Brenda Humble (b.1933)
Bogan Man 1996
Mild steel 1/4
50 x 18 x 9cm
Signed 'Humble 96', editioned and titled on base
no.9190

Humble's body of jewel-like still life's, abstracted in varying degrees are painterly, boldly colourful and beautifully simple. Her continuing motif; the silhouette of vase and flowers against an open window, is distinct and distilled to essential elements and colour blocks. Her palette is high keyed like Mattisse and in some of the still lives, the flatness and bold outline of shapes is somewhat reminiscent of Picasso. Her sculptures share a similar simplification of form; Humble pares back the image to its most elemental lines, creating crisp linea images of quirky teachers, laughing horses, squinting love hearts and little Alice figures.

Jamie Boyd (b.1948)
Sonata
Lithograph 44/275
74 x 102cm
no.0516

Jamie Boyd continues the tradition of the great Boyd family who have collectively made a profound contribution to Australian art though he has established a firm reputation as a painter in his own right. Jamie currently lives in London though he regularly returns to Australia and visits the Boyd property at Shoalhaven where he is reunited with the surrounding landscape and it’s beauty and strength. His works reflects this broad international sensibility and the enduring influence of the Australian landscape. A proficient painter, he has achieved success through many solo and group exhibitions both in Australia and Europe.

James Gleeson (1915-2008)
The Activist 1976
Mixed media on paper
26.7 x 23.9cm
no.2352

James Gleeson was Australia's best known and most important Surrealist. He had been painting and exhibiting consistently from the 1930s until 2008. He played a significant role in the Australian art scene, not only as a painter and poet, but as a critic, writer and curator. Gleeson combined skillful draughtsmanship with a great facility in handling paint. Delving into the subconscious, Gleeson used literary, mythological or religious subject matter to allow the viewer glimpses of extraordinary beauty. Regardless of their scale, the resulting paintings convey a sumptuous monumentality.

Mark Howson (b.1961)
Untitled (Abstract) 1985
Oil on paper
77 x 52.4cm
no.6564

In 1982 Mark Howson was one of the founding members of Roar Studios. Together with about twenty young artists, among whom included David Larwill, Mark Schaller, Wayne Eager and Mike Nicholls, Howson started an artist run gallery in Fitzroy, Melbourne – the purpose of which was to challenge the art establishment. Characterised by strong, expressionistic figurative works, ironically, the Roar artists quickly became noticed by the mainstream art world. Howson’s work is represented in the Australian National Gallery, Canberra; National Gallery of Victoria; New Parliament House, Canberra; Art Bank; numerous Regional and University collections and private collections in Australia, Europe and the USA.

Zai Kuang (b.1962)
Girl 21, 2008
Oil on canvas
30 x 30cm
no.10047

Most of my paintings are about children, toys and their surroundings. The reason I choose children as my subject is that: simplicity, purity and harmony, they are my attentions during the process of making painting. I think children match the thought perfectly.

I paint children in the interior and exterior. In the interior, I want to explore the relationships between children and toys. The space often dominates the works, there is a tranquil atmosphere around the children, the toys and the room. In the exterior, I look for the relationships between children and the environment, usually the space is more open. - Zai Kuang 2009

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Halycon
oil on canvas on board
30 x 37 cm
signed lower right
no.9720

“This enchanting work dating from Nolan's early career in the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda makes reference, through its title Halcyon, to an ancient Greek myth associated with the kingfisher, depicted here at rest on its floating nest. According to legend the father of the young Halcyon ordered the winds to stay calm during the brooding period so that the floating nest of the kingfisher would not be disturbed. Hence the term "halcyon days".

For Sidney Nolan his early days in St Kilda might indeed be called halcyon. During the mid 1940s the artist painted an extensive body of works recording life around Luna Park and at the St Kilda sea baths, including reminiscences from his childhood. In addition Nolan also painted numerous images relating to the Greek myth of Icarus, transposed into the environs of St Kilda.
Halcyon‚ was a work of particular personal attachment for Nolan, to the extent that he loaned the painting with the Art Gallery of New South Wales for an extended number of years. Nolan was especially attached to his early work as it provided him with immense stimulus for later projects. As Halcyon‚ is depiction of two of his favourite subjects birds and mythology, it is understandable why this painting was so treasured by the artist.”

Text by curator and art writer: Damian Smith


Stan Rapotec (1913-1997)
Untitled, 1960
Oil on board
75 x 100cm
no.5876

Stanislaus Rapotec
was one of the leading exponents of Abstract Expressionism in Australia. He is represented in the Australian National Gallery, all state galleries, many regional galleries as well as many other important public collections both in Australia and overseas including the Australian Embassy, Paris, Vatican Gallery of Modern Religious Art, Musée d'Art Moderne, Paris. Rapotec has been the recipient of many awards including the 1961 Blake Prize.

In Untitled 1960 the bold and energetic brushstrokes swirl and explode across the board, masterfully capturing the artists physical and emotional gestures.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Artist Spotlight: Zai Kuang

This week Eva Breuer Art Dealer would like to spotlight Zai Kuang who recently had a show titled Children's World (click here to view the exhibition). We still have some of his work in the gallery so please stop by to see these stunning paintings.

"I hope that when people look at my paintings, they can fell the quality of purity, simplicity and harmony by hearts. This feeling contrasts to the outside world."
-Zai Kuang, July 2009

Who (or what) do you consider your artistic inspiration?

My subjects come from daily life.


Do you listen to music while you work, and if so, what is most often playing?

No. I often work in quiet environment. It makes me more concentrate on my painting. The more you concentrate, the more you will get.

Who of your peers do you respect the most?

Lucian Freud.

Eva Breuer and Zai Kuang in front of his work for Children's World

Do you have any habits/rituals or strange superstitions when painting?

Yes, Silence.

When did you decide to become an artist?

I was in primary school.

What is your favourite colour?

Blue and Grey colour.

Small works hung for Zai Kuang's previous show Children's World

Do you have a favourite painting or work of art? If so, what is it?

some of Lucian Freud’s paintings.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Gallery News 29 July: David Boyd, Brett Whiteley, Ann Thomson



83 Moncur Street Woollahra NSW 2025
tel: 02 9362 0297 fax: 02 9362 0318
email: art@evabreuerartdealer.com.au
website: www.evabreuerartdealer.com.au


New in the gallery

David Boyd (b.1924)

David Boyd (b.1924)
The Willow and the Wattle 1990
Oil on canvas
34 x 44cm
Provenance: Private collection, Sydney
no.10699



Brett Whiteley (1939-1992)

Brett Whiteley (b.1939-1992)
The Dove and the Moon 1983
Oil and sticks on plywood
51 x 47 cm
Signed verso 'Brett Whiteley'
Provenance: Robin Gibson Gallery (label attached verso), Private collection Sydney
no.10688

Brett Whiteley created some of the most important paintings of twentieth century Australian Art. Of his 1970's masterpieces the bird paintings are among the most beautiful. The current work was purchased through Robin Gibson Gallery where Whiteley exhibited his birds in 1979 to great acclaim. The painting has only ever been in one collection. Three of Brett Whiteley's most memorable solo exhibitions were devoted to the theme in 1979, 1983, 1988. The bird paintings follow on from Whiteley's time in New York, a very difficult period marked by the culmination of Alchemy 1973, Whiteley's monumental masterpiece which almost overwhelmed him in the attempt. They were completed around 1978 when he became the first and only artist to win all three of the Art Gallery of New South Wales prestigious painting prizes; the Archibald, the Wynne and the Sulman.

Brett Whiteley is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, many regional galleries, as well as many important public collections both in Australia and overseas including the Tate Gallery London.

Visit our website to view other works by Brett Whiteley


Ann Thomson (b.1933)

Ann Thomson (b.1933)
Transmition 2004
Oil on linen
122 x 153 cm
Provenance: Private collection, Sydney
no.10705


Visit our website to view other important Australian abstract paintings


Richard Larter (b.1929)

Richard Larter (b.1929)
Composition #6 1987
Mixed media on board
122 x 183cm
Signed: 'R.L 12 1987' Lower right
Verso: Richard Larter, Composition #6, Chromacryl, PVA and Irgalite, markal oil stick, Yass
Provenance: Watters Gallery 1990
The Rivkin Collection. Private collection Sydney.
no.10027


Visit our website to view other important Australian abstract paintings


Ray Crooke (b.1922)

Ray Crooke (b.1922)
Untitled (woman) 1990
Oil on board
29.5 x 23cm
Provenance: Private collection, Sydney
no.10655



Ray Crooke (b.1922)

Ray Crooke (b.1922)
Untitled
49.3 x 60cm
Provenance: Private collection, Sydney
no.10655


Visit our website to view other works by Ray Crooke




Upcoming Exhibition
Opening Wednesday 5 August, 6-8PM

Zhong Chen (b.1969)
Beijing Girl 2009


Paintings available to view in the gallery now

Zhong Chen (b.1969)
Beijing Girl 16 2009
Oil on linen
130 x 130 cm
no.10696




Zhong Chen (b.1969)
Rainy Day 9 2009
Oil on linen
152 x 152cm
no.10692


View our website to view other works by Zhong Chen




Judy Cassab (b.1920)
Exhibition: The Two of Us


Exhibition of works by Judy Cassab and John Seed.
To be opened by the Hon. Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
Wednesday 30 September 2009 drinks, 6-8PM

Judy Cassab (b.1920)
White Lillies with Sculpture 2008
Oil on board
60 x 44.5 cm
signed 'Cassab 08' lower right
Provenance: The artist
no.10674


Visit our website to view other works by Judy Cassab


John Seed
Crab Nebula
painted steel
51 x 39 x 22cm


Visit our website to view other works by John Seed




Current Exhibition

Zai Kuang (b.1962)
Children's World


Zai Kuang (b.1962)
Sarah and her toy 2009
Oil on canvas
75 x 75cm
no.10620


Visit our website to view works by Zai Kuang





Focus on Stephen Nothling

Stephen Nothling (b.1962)
Becoming Light
Oil on canvas
45 x 75 cm
no.10486

Stephen Nothling (b.1962)
Suspending Belief 2005
Oil on canvas
91.5 x 121.5 cm
no.8150

Stephen Nothling (b.1962)
Twirl 2008
Oil on canvas
100 x 150 cm
no.9775





Featured Graphic

John Coburn (1925-2006)


John Coburn (1925-2006)
Sunburst 1976
Screen print A/P (4 colours)
artist's proof: 10
69.8 x 52cm (image)
76.6 x 56.8cm (sheet)
signed, dated LR, inscribed with title LC and with edition LL
printed by Barbara Coburn, Sydney
no.10430


Visit our website to view other graphics by John Coburn


Current Exhibition

July
Gallery 1: Winter Exhibition
Gallery 2: Zai Kuang


Upcoming Exhibitions

August
Gallery 1: Zhong Chen
Gallery 1: Winter Exhibition
Gallery 2: Victor Rubin

September
Gallery 1: Tony Irving
Gallery 2: Spring Exhibition
Gallery 1: Judy Cassab & John Seed

October
Gallery 1: Spring Exhibition
Gallery 2: Sam Wade
Gallery 2: Rosemary Valadon
Gallery 2: Madeleine Winch

Please send us an email if you wish to be added to the weekly newsletter list.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Gallery News 22 July: Brett Whiteley, Patrick Hockey, Judy Cassab, Lloyd Rees



83 Moncur Street Woollahra NSW 2025
tel: 02 9362 0297 fax: 02 9362 0318
email: art@evabreuerartdealer.com.au
website: www.evabreuerartdealer.com.au



New in the gallery

Brett Whiteley (1939-1992)

Brett Whiteley (b.1939-1992)
The Dove and the Moon 1983
Oil and sticks on plywood
51 x 47 cm
Signed verso 'Brett Whiteley'
Provenance: Robin Gibson Gallery (label attached verso), Private collection Sydney
no.10688


Brett Whiteley created some of the most important paintings of twentieth century Australian Art. Of his 1970's masterpieces the bird paintings are among the most beautiful. The current work was purchased through Robin Gibson Gallery where Whiteley exhibited his birds in 1979 to great acclaim. The painting has only ever been in one collection. Three of Brett Whiteley's most memorable solo exhibitions were devoted to the theme in 1979, 1983, 1988. The bird paintings follow on from Whiteley's time in New York, a very difficult period marked by the culmination of Alchemy 1973, Whiteley's monumental masterpiece which almost overwhelmed him in the attempt. They were completed around 1978 when he became the first and only artist to win all three of the Art Gallery of New South Wales prestigious painting prizes; the Archibald, the Wynne and the Sulman.

Brett Whiteley is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, many regional galleries, as well as many important public collections both in Australia and overseas including the Tate Gallery London.

Visit our website to view other works by Brett Whiteley


Patrick Hockey (1948-1992)

Patrick Hockey (1948-1992)
Untitled (Nindooinbah circa 1984)
Acrylic on board
91 x 121 cm
signed 'Hockey' lower right
Provenance: Private collection Sydney
no.10687


Patrick Hockey's paintings of the grand interior of his heritage listed Edwardian homestead 'Nindooinbah' south of Brisbane are among his most important work. In contrast with the elongated characters and sparse landscapes of his 1970's outback paintings in which it is possible to locate some stylistic similarity to Sidney Nolan, the 1980's interior paintings of the lounge room of the house bring to mind the patterned walls of Matisse's interiors of around 1911. The landscape does remain present however with glimpses of mesa's (flat topped hills) visible through the windows of the lavishly decorated interior. The subject is very much that of the image of the European within the ancient Australian landscape - a subject at the core of Australian art history.

Patrick Hockey is represented in the Art Gallery of Western Australia, Australian National university and many other public and important private collections throughout Australia and overseas including Art Bank and the collection of HRH Prince and Princess of Wales.

Visit our website to view other works by Patrick Hockey


Judy Cassab (b.1920)
Exhibition: The Two of Us


Exhibition of works by Judy Cassab and John Seed.
To be opened by the Hon. Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
Wednesday 30 September 2009 drinks, 6-8pm

Judy Cassab (b. 1920)
Omen III 1982
Oil on canvas
86 x 131 cm
Signed 'Cassab' lower right
Provenance: The artist
no.10676


Visit our website to view other works by Judy Cassab

Judy Cassab (b. 1920)
Dancing Figures 2008
Oil on canvas
44.5 x 60 cm
signed 'Cassab 08' lower right
Provenance: The artist
no.10673


Visit our website to view other works by Judy Cassab



Lloyd Rees (1895-1988)

Lloyd Rees (1895-1988)
Evening #1 1982-1983
Oil on board
50 x 60 cm
Signed 'L R 83' lower right
Provenance: Private collection Sydney, von Bertouch Galleries, Newcastle
no.10658


Preoccupied with depicting the effects of light, Lloyd Rees' paintings from the latter part of his career contain a purity of light that is unsurpassed in twentieth century Australian painting. Many of the paintings completed in the early 1980's were painted at Rees' son's home in Hobart. The bright, white light of the Australian sun is captured in the present painting at the point during a summer evening when night and day are for a moment blurred. Evening no.1 is executed with the skill of an ageing master reflecting on the cycle of life in his final years and brings to mind the light filled works of the Frenchman Claude Lorrain or the British master J M W Turner. Quoted in the age at the time this painting was completed Rees explained, 'If there is one thing I want now, it is for my paintings to be light right through. One of the great things the impressionists did, probably not consciously, was to bring back what the great fresco schools of Italy had achieved, the sense of the painting being on a light background. This is what I'm trying to do here, to make lightness of the canvas the dominating thing.'1

Lloyd Rees is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, many regional galleries as well as numerous other public collections in Australia. He was the recipient of numerous coveted awards during his lifetime including the Wynne Prize in 1950 and 1982 the year the current picture was painted.

Reference: Rees, L., The Age, 1982 cited in Pearce, B., Australian Art in the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2000, p.287

Visit our website to view other important Australian paintings



Jamie Boyd (b.1948)

Jamie Boyd (b.1948)
Girl with Yellow Hat
Pastel on paper
92 x 75 cm
Signed 'Jamie Boyd' lower right
Provenance: Private collection Sydney
no.10660


Jamie Boyd continues the tradition of the great Boyd family who have collectively made a profound contribution to Australian art though he has established a firm reputation as a painter in his own right. Jamie currently lives in London though he regularly returns to Australia and visits the Boyd property at Shoalhaven where he is reunited with the surrounding landscape and it’s beauty and strength. His works reflects this broad international sensibility and the enduring influence of the Australian landscape and the the strong tradition of figure painting in the Boyd family. A proficient painter, he has achieved success through many solo and group exhibitions both in Australia and Europe.

Visit our website to view other important Australian works on paper




Current Exhibition
This Saturday 25 July, 3-5pm


Zai Kuang (b.1962)
Children's World


Zai Kuang (b.1962)
Girl 21, 2009
Oil on canvas
30 x 30 cm
no.10047


Visit our website to view works by Zai Kuang

Zai Kuang (b.1962)
New Garden of Eden 7, 2009
Oil on canvas
100 x 76cm
no.10642


Visit our website to view works by Zai Kuang




The gallery always has works by:
Brian Dunlop, John Coburn, Sidney Nolan

Brian Dunlop (b.1938)
Sea Breeze
Gouache on paper
71 x 53 cm (sight size)
no.9537


Visit our website to view other works by Brian Dunlop


John Coburn (1925-2006)
The Performance 1978
oil on canvas
122 x 153.5 cm
signed Coburn lower right
Signed, titled, and dated Sydney 1978 on reverse
Provenance: Corporate Collection, Sydney
no.10497


Visit our website to view other works by John Coburn


Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Leda and the Swan c.1960
Mixed media on paper
29.2 x 24.2 cm
signed lower right: N
verso: Certificate of Authenticity
N/C No 130 Leda and Swan 5 Dec 1960 Nolan
Provenance: The artist, Private collection Sydney
no.90235


In these beautiful works on paper Nolan creates multiple transparent layers among which Leda and the Swan1 engage in a sensuous dance, sometimes floating, other times submerged in water. Constantly innovative in his approach to new mediums, Nolan painted his Leda and Swan works on paper with fabric dyes and mixed media achieving wonderful translucency in each stroke.

In a letter to Kenneth Clark of January 1960, Nolan writes, “The small Leda pictures are painted with a permanent first grade German dye called Helizaren. I get it as a creamy paste form and use water as a medium. The paper used is a coated paper. The surface is partially absorbent (like gesso) and the effect is sometimes of staining.”2
RM

1 See cat. no.22 for details on the Leda and Swan series
2 Sidney Nolan to Kenneth Clark quoted in Underhill. N., Nolan on Nolan: Sidney Nolan in his own words, Penguin Group, Australia, 2007, p.193.

Visit our website to view other works on paper by Sidney Nolan




Sale Section

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Leda and the Swan 1959
mixed media on paper
31 x 25.5cm
no. 10496


Visit our website to view other works on paper by Sidney Nolan



Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Leda and the Swan 1958
mixed media on paper
25.5 x 31cm
no. 10494


Visit our website to view other works on paper by Sidney Nolan

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Leda and the Swan 1959
mixed media on paper
31 x 25.5cm
no. 10495

Visit our website to view other works on paper by Sidney Nolan

Percy Lindsay (1870-1952)
Milking Time c.1930s
Oil on panel
28 x 33 cm
no.3709


Visit our website to view other works under $5000



Robert Dickerson (b.1924)
Sketch for Committee Meeting
Charcoal on paper
55.7 x 76.3 cm
signed lower right: Dickerson
Provenance: Rudy Komon Gallery, Sydney
Label on the reverse
Exhibited: 'A Contemporary Australian Drawing', Western Australian Art Gallery, 2nd February-5th March, 1978, Cat. No. 17
no.9731


Robert Dickerson is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries many regional galleries as well as many other public collections throughout Australia and overseas. He was won numerous coveted awards including the 1975 Gold Coast Art Prize.

Visit our website to view other works by Robert Dickerson




Featured Graphic

John Olsen (b.1928)


John Olsen (b.1928)
Lucio's 2003
Etching 56/60
43 x 59 cm
56 x 76 cm
Signed and dated 'John Olsen 03' lower right
Edition number lower left and title lower middle
no.10250 (unframed)


Visit our website to view other graphics by John Olsen

Robert Dickerson (b.1924)

Robert Dickerson (b.1924)
Don Giovanni
Lithograph 42/60
76.5 x 56.5cm
Signed 'R Dickerson' lower right
Commissioned by the Australian Opera for its
Australian Opera's 40th Anniversity Print Portfolio
(to be sold individually)
no.7730

Visit our website to view other works by Robert Dickerson



Upcoming Exhibition
Opening Wednesday 5 August, 6-8pm


Zhong Chen (b.1969)
Beijing Girl 2009


Zhong Chen (b.1969)
Beijing Girl 6 2009
Oil on linen
130 x 130 cm
no.10665


Visit our website to view other works by Zhong Chen


Exhibition Invite:


Current Exhibition

July
Gallery 1: Winter Exhibition
Gallery 2: Zai Kuang


Upcoming Exhibitions

August
Gallery 1: Zhong Chen
Gallery 1: Winter Exhibition
Gallery 2: Victor Rubin

September
Gallery 1: Tony Irving
Gallery 2: Spring Exhibition
Gallery 1: Judy Cassab & John Seed

October
Gallery 1: Spring Exhibition
Gallery 2: Sam Wade
Gallery 2: Madeleine Winch

Please send us an email if you wish to be added to the weekly newsletter list.
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