Photo: Peter van den Berg pjvdbphoto.com pjvdb3@gmail.com B2801Photo: Peter van den Berg pjvdbphoto.com pjvdb3@gmail.com B2801Photo: Peter van den Berg pjvdbphoto.com pjvdb3@gmail.com B2801
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
Nature is the primary concern of Matt Duke’s art work. Each of his pieces demonstrate a relationship between form and shape. There is an aesthetic beauty in the simplicity of the sculpture, which depends heavily on line and colour and evokes a moment in time captured perfectly in the fascinating medium of bronze. His twenty years experience in the rare skill of patination is evident in the bold and vibrant palette only permitted to this metal. Such hues and tones would not be successful on pieces crowded by texture, but thanks to the contemporary and delicate surface, produced with skilfully carved sharp lines and curved body, the spectrum brings personality and life to each work. The subjects in his earlier works have a more subtle, almost poised stance, whereas his more recent pieces have a fabulous, hypnotic movement, coupled with a focused and determined gaze.
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
‘After a thrilling surf on the Severn Bore, I scramble up the muddy bank ready for the long walk back. It’s dusk as I make my way through an orchard by the river. I spot a beautiful barn owl swooping from an old apple tree and I am inspired.’
Martin’s sculptures capture a moment in time, a fleeting glimpse of a beautiful animal in it’s natural environment. His pieces focus on endangered species and native uk wildlife. Working from his Studio in the Cotswolds, Martin works in bronze, silver, resin, stone and driftwood.
Please note that each piece is unique and the wooden perch of the owl changes each time – the one in the image has sold. – Waiting time of four months for a bronze to be cast.
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
’I enjoy placing sculptures within an environment rather than on a plinth. ‘Sloth’ was a continuation of my hanging sculptures, another endangered animal with a wonderful character.’
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
‘Ginger was sculpted as a companion for Willy. Every time I placed Willy in a new spot I felt he was lonely so I made him a friend.’ Designed as a partner piece, ‘Ginger’ also works well on her own, especially if she has something to reach for like a branch or a knotted rope.
Partner Willy with ‘Ginger’
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
Bronze available only, Iron Resin has now sold out
Dimensions – 75cm / 35cm / 30cm
Weight – 7kg
Martin Adamson:
“I have always been interested in sculpting endangered species. Willy, the first of my hanging orangutans, was inspired after reading an article about the orphanages set up to care for the babies who had lost their parents to poachers.”
Martin Adamson’s sculptures capture a moment in time, a fleeting glimpse of a beautiful animal in it’s natural environment.
Image: Willy with Partner Ginger (Available together for £3,000)
Partner Willy with ‘Ginger’
If you are interested in purchasing this piece, or have questions about this sculpture or any others then please email our sales consultant: tadd@cotswoldsculpturepark.co.uk or call Tadd Hartland on 07545 648918
*We are a wholly independent family run business and work closely alongside our artists during the sales process and our buyer introductions. Our ethos is built on a mutual trust working together.
Jamie Frost is a fine artist making sculptures and drawings. His work seeks to subtly reframe traditional figuration and the classical tradition. Working with live models, he may take inspiration from renaissance sculpture, cinema, Butoh theatre, or a gesture made in his company. Jamie patiently considers the pose, composition and gesture of his works in lengthy experimentation. A layered process of sketches, prints, maquettes, photographs, and drawings contribute to the production of major pieces of sculpture or installation. Recent works explore pairings and groups of figures, revealing an interest in the gaps between us, both imposed and elective.
‘The words we use with trees: limb; heartwood; trunk, are the language of bodies. The smell, warmth, weight, moisture, the sounds, are analogous with human flesh. They are heady and visceral. These sensory qualities heighten my relationship with the work and I see no reason to suppress this. I wish you to experience it. We rely on muscle memory to perform actions. Perhaps it follows that a certain amount of emotional memory might be required in the making of art, to draw upon a recollection of things felt.’