'Tree and Moon' (2012) by David Inshaw
Oil on canvas, 91 x 91 cm. For more on David Inshaw’s life and work see « the David Inshaw website and online gallery »
British Art, British Artists, Paintings and Limited Edition Prints.
British art gallery for modern British paintings limited edition prints and contemporary art by leading contemporary British artists - Red Rag British Art Gallery.
Never and always
The influence of poetry on David Inshaw's art first became apparent in the 1970s, as the titles of several paintings from that period reveal. Two decades on, Simon Rae finds the artist is mixing poetry and paint to even greater effect.
Never and always
The influence of poetry on David Inshaw's art first became apparent in the 1970s, as the titles of several paintings from that period reveal. Two decades on, Simon Rae finds the artist is mixing poetry and paint to even greater effect.
Chronology and solo exhibitions
An illustrated summary of David Inshaw's life and work.
Subject and style
Nicholas Usherwood's survey continues through the 1970s with a look at the paintings that made David Inshaw's name and his time with the Brotherhood of Ruralists.
One moment one summer
A new style of painting in the 1980s brought a greater freedom to David Inshaw's work, and his brush strokes grew broader and more relaxed. By Christopher Neve.
The David Inshaw website and on-line gallery
The official website of the artist David Inshaw, with an on-line gallery of over 200 paintings, collages, drawings and etchings.
Pastoral magical
In his dreamlike West Country scenes, David Inshaw discovers the surreal behind everyday life. By Rachel Campbell-Johnston.
Subject and style
Nicholas Usherwood's survey continues through the 1970s with a look at the paintings that made David Inshaw's name and his time with the Brotherhood of Ruralists.
The David Inshaw website and on-line gallery
The official website of the artist David Inshaw, with an on-line gallery of over 200 paintings, collages, drawings and etchings.
Epiphanies
David Inshaw's use of landscape as a metaphor for human emotions has its roots in the nineteenth-century English pastoral tradition, but his sandcastles, bonfires and fireworks are powerful new symbols of love and loss. By Nicholas Usherwood.
Arcádia Interiorana: Photo
Secundum naturam vivere, sub specie aeternitatis.
David Inshaw. Bonfire, Moon & Fireworks. 2012
British Art, British Artists, Paintings and Limited Edition Prints.
British art gallery for modern British paintings limited edition prints and contemporary art by leading contemporary British artists - Red Rag British Art Gallery.
Artodyssey
Painting is silent poetry, and poetry is painting that speaks. Simonides