Serigraphs
Select images from a region: All regions : SE England : South & West Wales : North Wales
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'Treleddyd Fawr' is a hamlet on the Dewisland Peninsula. This little group of cottages, farmhouses and farm buildings sits on the southern slopes of Carnedd Lleithr, and can be seen from the edge of Saint Davids. The road to the left of the picture is actually a green lane, and was once known as 'the road to New York', as it led over the hill to an even smaller hamlet, in which lived a community of Quakers, who hoped to sail to the USA.
Size: 27 x 27cm Price = £90 Edn Qty. = 250
artist's print
SE08 - Beached Lugger drying its sails
'Beached lugger drying its sails' shows a type of boat very common around the coast of the UK until the 1930s. Following a storm at sea, the boat would be beached or taken into harbour, and if the rain had stopped, the sails would usually be left to dry before being lowered and furled. This would help prevent the sails from rotting.
Size: 28 x 28cm Price = £90 Edn Qty. = 250
artist's print
'Welsh harbour'looks as though it was painted from the sea, but it is actually Fishguard painted from across the bay at Goodwick. This is the fourth image I have painted from the same viewpoint, but each of them is different, and this is the first that has been produced as a serigraph.
Size: 28 x 28cm Price = £90 Edn Qty. = 250
artist's print
The cottage is one of about ten ruins in the abandoned settlement of Maes y Mynedd, about three miles from Saint Davids. The cottages were once the homes of Quaker families waiting to ship to Pennsylvania, and the green lane leading to the village over Carnedd Leithr was known as the road to New York. The village was abandoned many years ago, and cottages are in ruin, but the whole site has an abundance of wild flowers through many months of the year, giving it a quite magical appearance
Size: 54 x 46cm Price = £150 Edn Qty. = 250
artist's print
Porthgain is on the north coast of Pembrokeshire, about eight miles from Saint Davids. This little village has seen a number of changes in its short history: at one time it was a fishing village, then a transit point for local slate and stone, and now, once again a fishing village, but with many visitors to its local pub, noted for its crab salad and chips. The buildings to the left of the picture are the remains of hoppers used in conjunction with stone crushers,and the building at the bottom right is s disused lime-kiln. The harbour mouth is so narrow that even the little coastal cargo boats were too large to sail in under their own power, and were warped in with capstans and ropes situated on the quays.
Size: 45 x 54cm Price = £150 Edn Qty. = 250
artist's print
PEN CAER (ii) and STORM OVER THE PRESELI HILLS are two views from near our old home at Mabws Fawr (see immediately below). Pen Caer is the headland to the bay that forms Goodwick, and is surmounted by Garn Fawr, mentioned previously. Seen in the right light, the foreground really is a swirling mass of curves and colour. This image was used by the Council for the Protection of Rural Wales, as a greetings card. The second image shows the actual colour of the sky one May evening a few years ago, just preceding one of those awesome thunderstorms that show the power of nature at its most magnificent.
Size: 65 x 45cm Price = £275 Edn Qty. = 250
artist's print
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