Adela Powell
Adela Powell is inspired by nature, landscapes and the sea, which is naturally conveyed through her clay. Even her figurative pieces examine layered and eroded rocky surfaces, embracing the fragility and unpredictability of her subject.
Alexia Weill
Alexia Weill works in stone, marble, diabase, limestone or serpentine, seeking harmony in round shapes. With her “Circular impressions”, she works the stone in circles like a mandala, inscribing and sculpting her emotions, her visions, to emanate a circulating energy.
Alison Coaten
Alison Coaten is fascinated by the human desire to make sense of existence through religion, myth and folklore, and the use of art to create concrete images of worship in the form of icons and idols.
Annabel Munn
Annabel Munn creates ceramics from thin earthenware slabs, torn into sections, and constructed into new forms. These evoke memories of place and time, and highlight a lifelong fascination with fossils, ancient landscape, architecture, and found objects.
Davide Galbiati
Working in wood and concrete, Davide Galbiati sculpts to bring the soul of his subject matter to life through materials that present a paradox. The end result is serene and beautiful.
Elizabeth Price
Elizabeth Price’s sculptures are as emotive as they are highly collectible. Sculpting details and subtle gestures, she manages to capture the most intimate moments of joy, sadness and contemplation.
Félix Valdelièvre
Felix showcases his fascination with deconstructing the oblong, cube and sphere forms and shapes through large, abstract sculptures.
Jackie Summerfield
Sculptor Jackie Summerfield captures the charm and character of familiar animals and birds with her contemporary ceramic pieces.
Jemma Gowland
Through her evocative ceramic sculptures, Jemma Gowland explores gender roles and how societal norms continue to shape the way children are raised, in particular how girls are constrained from birth to conform to an appearance and code of behaviour, to present a perfect face and maintain the expectations of others.
Jessie Mooy
New Artist The women that international artist Jessie Mooy portrays in her raku sculptural works have become symbolic Earth Mothers; guardians of the animal world.
Jon Barrett-Danes
Jon Barrett-Danes animals are hand built and enigmatic indoor and outdoor sculptures; endowed with the strength and humour it took to physically create them.
Klaus W. Rieck
Klaus W. Reick creates archetypal and symbolic forms in stone. His sculptures are an expression of a metaphysical being; appealing to the observer, encouraging reflection and contemplation.
Mary Jones (The Brick Thief)
Mary Jones’ vibrant, painterly and playful ceramic heads are a discussion of human emotions and how they are translated in our faces.
Mélanie Bourget
Mélanie Bourget’s bold, figurative raku sculptures offer a contemporary, yet offbeat, style; oscillating between realism and fantasy.
Pierre Diamantopoulo
Pierre Diamantopoulo's scope is diverse; spanning truly monumental installations and more accessible pieces - made with clay, plaster steel and bronze. His contemporary sculpture mixes human figuration with sophisticated, geometric abstraction.
Radek Andrle
Radek Andrle’s elegant alloy sculptures are inspired by the beauty of the human form.
Remon Jephcott
With delicate ceramic sculptures that celebrate the beauty of life cycles, Remon Jephcott explores the notion of decaying fruit as a metaphor for the female experience.
Su Jameson
Su Jameson’s hand-built ceramic sculptures and figures strive to create exchanges and speak of personal narrative. With forms that are drawn into, punctured and cut away with scratches, finger and tool-marks left like battle scars.