Designer Desire: Natasha Newton

Montage of Natasha Newton artworks

I love these paintings by Natasha Newton; the fields of fluffy sheep, flock of birds above and little white-washed house with its smoking chimney sitting in the landscape on its own reminds me of our home.

Her mixed media artworks are a little bit folk art and are very, very charming. She sells original paintings, prints, greeting cards and postcards. Sign up to her mailing list to be among the first to hear of new works available.

The lightness of texture and touch in her acrylic and gouache paintings makes them look like they’re textile pieces.

She demonstrates her process and methods in the short film below…

Pay a visit to her Instagram stream to see lots more of her work!

All images © Natasha Newton

Designer Desire: Lilwen Lewis

Montage of Lilwen Lewis paintings

A couple of weeks ago on a trip into Aberystwyth, Justin walked past Oriel y Bont – and an artwork in the window really stood out for him. He went over for a closer look and found that it was painted by Welsh artist, Lilwen Lewis.

When he returned home, he told me about it, and we looked online to see if we could find any information about her and discover any more of her works.

Lilwen is local to New Quay, a Mid-Wales harbour town 20 miles south of Aberystwyth. She studied art for 5 years; first to Carmarthen School of Art then on to Swansea School of Art to study Painting & Stained Glass and finally Cardiff College of Art, graduating from Cardiff University. She returned to live and work in New Quay after her studies and a five year stint teaching Art and Craft at St Clears Secondary School. She’s a member of Cardigan Art Society.

My inspiration comes from the landscape around my home walking through woods, farms and down to the seafront among the fishing boats. Observing the changing moods of the landscape and the people.

I like experimenting with different mediums and techniques. Going from realism through to semi abstraction. You never know how work will turn out or what it will lead to.

Portrait of Lilwen Lewiscredit

Additional image credits:

Oriel y Bont | The Gallery yr Oriel

Designer Desire: Douglas Pittuck

Montage of artworks by Douglas Pittuck

Douglas Frederick Pittuck (1911-1993) was an accomplished fine art painter. Born in South East London, he attended Wallington Grammar School. This was followed, between 1931 & 1939, by part-time study at Ruskin School of Drawing, Oxford and then full-time between 1946 and 1948.

Douglas Pittuck soon made his home the market town of Barnard Castle in Teesdale, County Durham. From 1948, he taught art at Barnard Castle School for a quarter of a century, was a founder of Barnard Castle Art Society and was one of the ‘Four Teesside Painters’.

In 1958, Pittuck created a mural on the east wall of the newly-built St Mary’s Parish Hall, in Barnard Castle. It has recently undergone a successful restoration by local restorer, Luke Jordan (it’s shown – pre-restoration – at the top of the montage above).

He seemed to develop a number of different styles during his career; the pair of paintings at the bottom of the montage remind me of the works by the Grosvenor School.

His work is in the collections of The Science Museum, The Bowes Museum, New College, Oxford and Durham County Council.

Self-portrait by Douglas Pittuckcredit

Additional image credits:
ArtUK | Invaluable | Run Ing

Designer Desire: Ifor Pritchard

Montage of Ifor Pritchard paintings

Since moving to Ceredigion, we’ve discovered so many incredible Welsh artists. The latest in that line is Ifor Pritchard. I adore his expressive, impasto style; thick strokes of oil paint confidently applied with brush and knife to the canvas.

Pritchard (1940-2010) was a painter whose subject matter consisted mainly of the slate quarrying industry that he saw around him growing up in Carmel, Gwynedd in North Wales. He created portraits of the quarrymen (at work and at the pub), the quarry managers, the work horses, the machinery.

For many years, he worked as an art teacher mainly at Ysgol Sir Huw Owen in Caernarfon from where he retired in 1992. It wasn’t until 2007 that he mounted his first exhibition (of 30 works) in Glynllifon, south of Caernarfon.

Memories are my inspiration. Memories of a childhood in the village of Carmel in the ’40s. This is a village situated within a stone’s throw of the Dyffryn Nantlle slate quarries and was, therefore, a village that was almost totally dependent on the slate. After a lifetime of producing and teaching art, memories now transport me back to those early days. It is an endeavour to depict an extremely claustrophobic life that was, in the main, based on the quarry and the chapel. I am only interested in the human aspect of the industry. I have slate, but not the dust, in my veins.

Craig yr Oesoedd/True Grit by Myrddin ap Dafydd is an 80-page, bi-lingual study of some of his works.

Image credits:
Artnet | Mutual Art