Maria Anderson
Maria Anderson is an abstract artist whose work challenges personal identity within the surrounding environment.
Maria Anderson is an abstract artist whose work challenges personal identity within the surrounding environment.
Evie Webb is a photographer exploring the innate merit, necessity and virtue of mortality and the ageing process, harking back to Dutch Vanitas.
Architecture and the landscape provide inspiration for Alexandra Ene, who highlights the relationship between nature and the manmade.
Jack Bowman is a studio portrait photographer interested in the properties of visually compelling aura imagery.
Steventon’s work explores the link between writing and sewing, stitch and word. It’s an exploration of communication and messaging.
Grace Alison used photography, sculpture and craft media to create a multi-dimensional series exploring her Nana’s home after being unused.
Sophie Rothwell’s The Archives superimposes one moment in time on top of another, with the image highlighting its own construction.
Sophie Martin’s practice considers 2D and 3D approaches to painting through the use of multiple delicate and easily manipulated materials.
Natasha Ahmed is an artist who lives and works in Sunderland. She takes an abstract approach, with texture and colour being the main factors.
Sarah Dallow’s work is centred on the portrayal of the female body, combining flesh with unfurling petals, framing limbs with a delicate touch.
Mia Ferullo uses self portraiture as a method to regain control over the perception of one’s body, depicting her figure unapologetically in paintings.
Manipulating light is Amy Majed’s primary aesthetic, with both artificial and natural light coming together in an amalgamation of forms.
Morgan Scott creates illustrations and sculptures based on female empowerment and sexual liberation, questioning representations of women.
John Cutting is driven to create awareness of the neglectful interferences that mankind has imposed on their natural surroundings.
Sjon Barnes explores “Non-Places”, which he defines as a space that, without humanity or the idea of capitalism, would cease to exist.
Steph Williams’ latest work addresses her experience of life in Covid19 lockdown: a personal struggle with the turmoil of heightened anxieties.
Jess Hargreaves describes her practice as “contemporary irreverence.” Through her work, she translates personal reactions to the everyday.
Emma Henderson is a queer visual artist from Yorkshire who mainly uses photographic practice to produce gender-bent and LGBTQ+ inspired art.
Sophie Cown is an architectural photographer whose work is built upon capturing and altering the perception of modern buildings.