Helen Priest
- Drawing
- Painting
- Printmaking
Here are bright and lively oil paintings and life drawings. The paintings are mainly Southwest seascapes; others are imaginative explorations responding to colour, light and the calligraphic marks that catch my eye.
Opening Hours
- Sat 13 Sept10am - 4pm
- Sun 14 Sept10am - 4pm
- Mon 15 Sept10am - 4pm
- Tue 16 Sept10am - 4pm
- Wed 17 SeptClosed
- Thu 18 Sept10am - 4pm
- Fri 19 Sept10am - 4pm
- Sat 20 Sept10am - 4pm
- Sun 21 Sept10am - 4pm
- Mon 22 Sept10am - 4pm
- Tue 23 Sept10am - 4pm
- Wed 24 SeptClosed
- Thu 25 Sept10am - 4pm
- Fri 26 Sept10am - 4pm
- Sat 27 Sept10am - 4pm
- Sun 28 Sept10am - 4pm
- Parking suitable for cars
- Universal access
- Family friendly (suitable for children)
I have worked in the southwest as artist and art teacher for over thirty years. I like to explore a range of media and styles, including sculpture, linoprinting and Life Drawing; but find I keep returning to my oil paints and the seascapes around my home.
Living on the coast, I am constantly buoyed by the colours and movement of the ocean.
I’m interested in the colours that flicker and shimmer at the edge of the ocean and the calligraphic marks that people and debris make on the beach.
When I paint outdoors I try to get a high viewpoint so I can see down into the water. Sometimes I stretch my perspective on the water even further - tilting the picture plane as if I'm very much higher than I really am. Some of these paintings take that a step further by imagining a bird's eye view and how people enjoying the water's edge might look from above.
Often I paint a place or a moment in a straightforward realistic way and that may lead to a looser or playful series of imaginative paintings.
With ocean water constantly moving, our eyes struggle to focus; we can’t pin down a still moment or a still image. In pursuit of this evanescence, my original vision dances away, abstracted in calligraphic marks and colour contrasts and obscured by successive layers of paint.
In trying to strike a balance between the abstract and the real, I find my work swings back and forth between the two.
