Artwork gallery Aerial perspective
Since the invention of the aeroplane and now increasingly with drones and online maps we can see the world from a perspective that once would have belonged exclusively to birds. Aerial perspectives often lose personality and details for a grander sense of space and scale. The grandeur and unexpectedness of this perspective can offer a sense of comfort as well as isolation.
Brineworks
George Williams
Shooting Stars, Or Missiles, Or Something Else Entirely
Ned Elliott
Santería, Santa Marta - Cuba
Dorry Spikes
Remember Me Bangladesh 2
Christabel Forbes
Ironmonger Row Baths
James Albon
False Epiphany at the Ballet
Aisha Farr
Palm House
Joshua Pell
Enclosure (Russell Square)
Daniel C Turner
Peak interest: London’s housing cycle and its social effect.
Louis Pohl Koseda
After a Japanese Scroll of a Chinese Settlement at the British Museum
Dorry Spikes
Brineworks
George Williams
Mixed media on printed paper, 67 x 49cm, 2022
Shooting Stars, Or Missiles, Or Something Else Entirely
Ned Elliott
Graphite on paper, 43 x 68 cm, 2023
Santería, Santa Marta - Cuba
Dorry Spikes
Mixed media on paper, 137 x 101 cm, 2017
Remember Me Bangladesh 2
Christabel Forbes
Mixed Media on Paper, 2015
Ironmonger Row Baths
James Albon
Ink and Colour Pencil, 42 x 51, 2015
False Epiphany at the Ballet
Aisha Farr
Etching, 2016
Palm House
Joshua Pell
Graphite on paper, 19 x 37 cm, 2023
Enclosure (Russell Square)
Daniel C Turner
Watercolour and pencil on paper, 42 x 28.5 cm, 2024
Peak interest: London’s housing cycle and its social effect.
Louis Pohl Koseda
Pen and ink drawing on canvas, 100 x 110 cm, 2023
After a Japanese Scroll of a Chinese Settlement at the British Museum
Dorry Spikes
Artist's proof on paper, 2017