I’m currently working on Gesso. I’m sewing & drawing on this wonderful ground and the attaching to wooden panels. I’ve got 10 on the go.. but here are a couple of them in progress.
Well blincs finished, but just finalised all the filming for The Space. (Stressful) especially for someone who doesnt like having photographs taken. I’ve also been accepted to show at the Drawing Suite which is a really lovely portal for some good drawings, so I’m thrilled. I’ve also got a Christmas Commission to finish in Oil.. So its all go for me..
My painting has been accepted for the Ludlow Open . Looks like a really lovely exhibition. Very excited..
Its so difficult to design a website that gives the right impression. How much work should I show?
I hope you like the new design.. its a bit clunky at the moment, because I have to get used to the process, but I think I prefer it..
you have been selected as this weeks Axis choice. http://www.axisweb.org/Directory.aspx
Please drop by and visit..
I stumbled across an old box of slides. Its strange how themes re-occur.
I have no idea where this work is..It was sold or lost on the way which is a shame, but I’m just glad to have found the transparencies. And there is even a little colour. I was braver then..

My show opens this Friday in Abergavenny at the very Beautiful Art Shop Gallery . I visited the gallery last week when I delivered my work and I was completely delighted by the whole architecture and place. Its a wonderful space with a fantastic Art shop at street level and a domestic gallery space on the first floor. The building itself used to be an old print workshop, but dates way back to mid 16th century. I’m really excited. I’m showing around 40 pieces and I share the exhibition with Nicky Hodge..a painter based in London..
Libby Anson. Art Critic Writer says….
“When confronted by art that seeks to be abstract, a common question in the mind is, what is this about? Association on some level with the image determines the viewer’s degree of engagement and human beings always seek some kind of reference point wherever possible. On the face of it, there is little to connect the two respective bodies of work here. Yet one could say that for both artists, their art is about the process of making and the process is the work we witness. Within and underneath each piece is a compulsion to respond to materials, to the surfaces they inhabit, to the potential of the imagined space and to the challenge of creating something meaningful out of the combination; the artists’ response is emotional and intuitive. The alchemy to which we refer here is about producing something metaphysical out of attention paid to the world, interpreted via the manipulation of form and colour, to bring pictures into being.
For Helen Booth, being present in a landscape – particularly during inclement seasons and at times when day is becoming night and vice versa and when nature is stripped back, so that the skeleton of a tree is reduced to the stark promise of fecundity to come – is a starting point for her attempt to conjure the very essence of the experience. Her work is more about sensibility than the senses. The weather has an effect on her mood, which might be translated into the menace of black in the form of an agitated block as in ‘Strings ‘, or a distinctive graphite line as in ‘Blue String’. Black for Booth is a positive colour that she uses a lot. It is by such darkness that we distinguish light and light is the core and spirit of her work and, particularly in her ‘Persephone’ series, patches of light come and go among the pale colours, like the shadows of clouds travelling across a landscape on a breezy, sunlit day.
Booth does not use a sketchbook but printmaking (via etched, acrylic sheets) and drawing alongside painting. Drawing and printmaking she loves for the rough and readiness of process of their making, allowing free flowing honesty and truth to the idea; painting on canvas calls on her reverence and patience and she takes a more methodical approach to working with this material. Just as light is always changing, her work is constantly in progress. She will revisit works over several years, as if they are never finished, always having the potential to be stripped back and worked on again. However, she stops short of obliterating a canvas or piece of paper completely, working on or into them with marks or thread. Recently she has taken to stabbing points into her work, enjoying, “the black dot or the void” that each attack on the surface creates. She claims to be fearful of colour; when she uses it she does so tentatively, using muted rather than shrieking tones, emphasising her aim to create an atmosphere of quiet and calm.