by ChrisHeirani | Mar 4, 2024
I first saw Jeremy Gardiner’s work in a show called A Panoramic View at Pallant House in Chichester. This ran alongside another, larger exhibition of pictures by John Tunnard, a vaguely overlooked English painter who started life in the 1930s as a Surrealist and ended...
by ChrisHeirani | Mar 4, 2024
The Jurassic Coast is England’s first natural World Heritage Site, a ninety-five mile long stretch of coastline running from Orcombe Point in east Devon to Old Harry Rocks in east Dorset. Its geology spans the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, 185 million...
by ChrisHeirani | Mar 4, 2024
Landscape painters broadly speaking – for the category is as broad and various as the subject itself – may be said to come in two kinds: there are what might be called without the least disparagement – for the great Turner would head any such list – the Travellers,...
by ChrisHeirani | Mar 4, 2024
Landscape painters broadly speaking – for the category is as broad and various as the subject itself – may be said to come in two kinds: there are what might be called without the least disparagement – for the great Turner would head any such list – the Travellers,...
by ChrisHeirani | Mar 4, 2024
Jeremy Gardiner’s paintings draw together ancient and contemporary features of the landscape, producing and art of simultaneous vision in which past and present share the same visual field. In Moonlight, Charmouth, these two elements meet head-on in the middle of the...