The Bingley Gallery’s Summer Exhibition will run 13 July to 24 September with 20 artists including Leyla Murr, Suzanne McQuade, Jade Marczynski, Saray Lyte (Seven hands Designs), Gabrielle Hall, Josie Barraclough, Kawa Saed, Dan Metcalfe, Paul Hudson, Nina Wright, Bonehead, Dehlia Barnard-Edmunds (The Merryweather Artist), Baldev Mehta, Tony Dexter, David Starley. L. Amy Charlesworth, Jane Fielder, Kate Lycett and Liz Brooks.

DO JOIN THE ARTISTS FOR OUR LAUNCH: 7-9PM WEDS 12 JULY

Josie Barraclough

Josie was actually born on the coast at Scarborough but her life as a painter, illustrator and teacher has taken her far afield and she’s now based in West Yorkshire. Using oil paint on a collage of printed clippings, her work literally incorporates layers of meaning but her work remains fresh and appealing.

Bonehead

Bonehead grew up here on Park Rd and attending local schools, ‘cared only for his art, graphics and design technology grades’. Going on to art college, he hoped, would lead to a creative career, but jobs on offer to a youngster were poorly paid and in frustration he walked onto a local building site – the First School he’d attended – and was offered a job labouring. The combination of hard graft combined with creativity in restoring and developing property worked well until ‘my back fell out of with the building trade’.

Attending night school to learn autoCAD, he came across a laser cutting machine, ‘an amazing bit of kit’ and bought his own to be able to offer signage alongside other building work. Not content with the serious stuff, mark, a fan of street art and graffiti art, put the cutter and spray-paint to work on some art work influenced by this, then brought them down to the Bingley Gallery where proprietor, David Starley immediately offered the chance to put them in the next show.

Having come full circle, he reckons it’s ‘pretty amazing’ to be back in Bingley doing art and playing around like he did as a young lad. He’s even adopting his schoolboy nickname ‘Bonehead’ as his artist’s name.

Suzanne McQuade

Suzanne is a watercolor painter in the classic tradition who aims to capture the peace and tranquility of favorite locations, and to convey these emotions to the viewer. Suzanne admits that the medium of watercolour is a tricky one; its unpredictability can be frustrating at times, but serendipitously rewarding at others – allowing light to shine through the translucent elements of the paint.

Sarah Light (Seven Hands)

We’re very pleased that Wilsden-Based Sarah is back for the summer show with her free-motion embroidery on wet-felted fabbric. Her hand-built up-cycled wood frames hugely enhance Sarah’s beautiful artistry.

Dehlia Barnard-Edmunds    The Merryweather Artist 

 Dehlia Barnard-Edmunds ‘The Merryweather Artist’ is new to the gallery. Her lino cuts focus on the natural environment and literally down to earth views of people on their allotments.

Jade Marczynski Embroidery

I saw this series of hand embroidered vignettes of some of Bradford’s long-standing and well-loved shops at The Saltaire Art Trail and immediately thought they’d go well in our summer show. There’s a balance between refreshingly originality of subject matter and a very long tradition of samplers brought up to date.

Leyla Murr

Leyla is a predominantly abstract artist, working both from her Eldwick home and The Dockfield Road Creative Arts Hub in Shipley. Originally from Zagreb, Croatia, her artistic training, provided by British and European tutors, allowed her to turn professional 15 years ago. Not surprisingly her work has an international appeal and can be found in collections across the world.

 

Tony Dexter

Ilkley-based Tony uses acrylics to create visually striking acrylics.  Many feature boats, in particular the famous cobles of the east coast

L. Amy Charlesworth

Amy is based in Bradford, has a BA fine art degree from Leeds Metropolitan University and works in oils on canvas. She covers a diverse range of subjects, painting whatever appeals to her, whether it be an old pair of gym shoes, or a complex spiral staircase. Her style is hyperrealistic. As Amy says, she “likes things to look like they look”.

For more of Amy’s work click here

 

Jane Fielder

Jane Fielder, the Gallery’s previous owner continues to be a favourite and whilst her ‘Janescapes’ are a regular feature of the gallery, she’s always happy to try something new for exhibitions. For this one, she admits to having got quite excited by a new medium: “A new set of Fluid acrylic drippy paint markers prompted this ‘burst’. It felt like the old days. It was so exciting sitting in the kitchen painting, my favourite cloth,  a beautiful white hyacinth, the toaster, ancient cannon gas grill and the tiles that had been there 30 years when we arrived and 30 years since. I painted on a beautiful  hand painted grey canvas that a neighbour generously gave me.”

David Starley

David, the proprietor of the Bingley Gallery, first studied art at Sydney University whilst working in a steel foundry, but then chose to follow a career in archaeology, before becoming a professional artist. He is a member of the Aire Valley Arts Group. David’s subjects explore the natural landscape of Yorkshire and beyond, with trees as the central focus of much of his work. Whilst trees are familiar objects in our environment, they are too easily passed without attention. By portraying the forms and character of individual trees, or groups in woodland, the viewer is led to a greater appreciation of these living structures – changeless yet changing, strong yet vulnerable, never to be taken for granted.

Oil paint is very thickly applied (impastp) with a painting knife to produce a three-dimensional, almost sculpted, image. This not only adds great depth but produces a surface that responds subtly to the changing light of the environment in which the work is displayed.

Find more of david’s work here

Paul Hudson

Paul Hudson is a member of the Aire Valley Artists Group and ‘Inkers’and , printing, weaving, painting and ceramics are amongst his repertoir. The two pieces in the Summer Exhibition use the first two tequniges to creat art in response to the Bradford Textile Collection. Paul explained “Starting with the way a weaving is noted down in the work books I imagined how to relate those patterns into an actual weave”

 

Gabrielle Hall     Acrylics

Gabrielle Hall’s knife-applied acrylic landscapes are inspired by the Yorkshire Dales Landscapes she loves to walk in.

Baldev Mehta

Baldev is a Bradford artist who sent us a few line of poetry to accompany his one artwork in the show:

The girl in the rain is deeply lost into the wilderness.
Gazing at the tall industrial building deep in to the sky
Crisp air
Cold drips of rain touch her soft warm cheeks her like pear drops
emotions on display gone unnoticed
as she peers at the Buildings, the fields and above in to the clouds
Happy to be alive as the beauty that surrounds her.
Happy to be home.

 

Daniel Metcalfe     Oils

Daniel’s oil paintings tend to be inspired by nature and landscape. Paint is used in a fairly loose manner and the work can move either towards realism or abstraction depending on the subject matter. He is particularly interested in finding satisfying ways of applying paint so that patterns and shapes are emphasised. Previously a Bingley Resident, he now lives in Thornton.

 

Nina Wright  Ceramics

Nina produces a wide range of ceramics, often functional but beautiful, wheel-thrown work intended to enhance everyday routines. In the gallery we currently have just a small selection of her unglazed porcelain tea-light holders. The incised designs and ‘torn’ edges become evident through the translucent ceramic when the light is burning.

Nina has a BA in Ceramics from North Staffordshire Polytechnic, Stoke on Trent, and taught pottery to students for 20 years, particularly at the Wharfe Street Centre in Otley. She works partly from her ex wash-house studio at the back of her Otley home, but also shares a communal studio in Camden where she teaches wheel throwing.

 

Liz Brooks

Further colour is brought to the gallery by Liz Brook’s fused glass. It seems only recently that she was first experimenting with this medium, but she’s now competing with the best artists in the field.

 

Dan Shiel

Perhaps the most unusual exhibit in the Exhibition is a book. Daniel Shiel, best known as an artist producing composite photos has turned his creative muse to writing.  His new book combines alternative history, fantasy and humour. ‘Thorntichronicon: A History and Guide to a Yorkshire Village and a Parallel World’ is an entertaining romp, which very loosely re-visualises the architectural remains of Thornton, where he lived for many years.

For more on this do see his website