I'm delighted to share that six of my pieces have been selected for the Summer Show at the Albany Gallery in Cardiff, running from 7 August to 12 September.
The Albany Gallery has been part of Welsh cultural life since 1965, when it was founded by Mary Yapp and the painter David Griffiths in Roath. Over the decades it has represented some of the country's most significant artists, and this summer's show also includes a retrospective of the late Alastair Elkes-Jones, whose paintings of rural and coastal South Wales have long been part of the gallery's story. To have my own work sitting alongside that history is something I don't take lightly.
The Selection
The six pieces chosen for the show span my local coastline in West Sussex and my beloved West Coast of Scotland.
From Sussex, there's Bracklesham Bay, High Tide, painted at high water when the light sits differently on the sand. Last Light of the Day: West Wittering to the Isle of Wight and Reflecting Clouds: East Head, The Witterings both look out toward that same stretch of water from different points along the shore. And Dell Quay: Golden Hour is a smaller, quieter piece, catching the harbour at its most still.
From Scotland, Loch na Keal and Beams of Light over Ardmeanach both come from Mull, a place whose scale and changeability I keep returning to. The light there rarely settles for long, and both paintings try to hold a moment of it before it moves on.
Together, the six give a fair picture of what I'm drawn to: coastlines at the edge of something, whether that's tide, light or weather.
Why This Matters
Gallery representation goes beyond simply selling work. It's about trust — a gallery deciding that what you make belongs in the same room as artists whose work they've championed for years. Being included in a show alongside a retrospective of an artist as respected as Alastair Elkes-Jones is a marker of that trust, and I'm genuinely grateful for it.
If you're in Cardiff between 7 August and 12 September, I'd encourage a visit. The Albany Gallery is part of the Own Art scheme, so if a piece catches your eye, you can spread the cost interest-free over 10 or 20 months, subject to status.
The Albany Gallery Summer Show runs from 7 August to 12 September at Albany Gallery, Albany Road, Cardiff.
Bracklesham Bay: High Tide (2025) — 122 x 122cm
Last Light of the Day: West Wittering to the Isle of Wight — 40 x 100cm
Loch na Keal, Isle of Mull — 77 x 102cm
Dell Quay: Golden Hour — 30 x 42cm
Reflecting Clouds: East Head, The Witterings — 40 x 100cm
Beams of Light over Ardmeanach, Isle of Mull — 77 x 91cm