Wycombe Court Artists
Friday 16 March - Monday 9 April 2012
A lively and varied exhibition of painting, ceramics, glass & sculpture by this popular group of local artists – Julie Wetenhall, Sue Fawthrop, Caroline Selvey, John Ashton & Tim Robinson.
Free entry & all work is for sale.
Below is just a small selection of the work that will be on show during this exhibition.
Please contact the gallery to check if a particular piece of artwork is still available.


Julie Wetenhall
Oil paint is her first love, her style is loose and expressive, she also uses mixed media, watercolour, acrylic and pastel to create colourful figurative and semi abstract images.
More recently Julie has ventured into ceramics, glass and printmaking.
Click HERE for Julie Wetenhall's biography.

Sue's paintings have a strong signature style conveying mood and atmosphere of place through her use of colour, texture and collage in oil, acrylic & watercolour.
Her interest is in creating an exciting image with a sense of mystery, leaving many questions unanswered for the viewer to ponder. The work has evolved into a contemporary expression of mood and atmosphere, a unique visual language.
Click HERE for Sue Fawthrop's biography.

Sculpture in ceramic & glass - animals, seeds, fruits & abstract forms.
"My main interests lie in ceramic sculpture based on animal and organic forms which is constantly evolving. The human form is also a source of inspiration. On occasions I like to combine ceramics with glass."
Click HERE for Caroline Selvey's biography.

Painting and drawing have always been an important part of John's life and his work has developed over the years. In the process, it has embraced, and still does embrace, several styles and media. Whilst still believing firmly in drawing skills being at the heart of good painting, he now works in a more abstracted style. Experienced in oils, pen and ink, and watercolour, he currently concentrates on acrylics where his work, mostly using landscape or still life as the source of an idea, reveals his enjoyment of the imaginative exploration of form, line and colour – especially colour.
Click HERE for John Ashton's biography.

Tim says of his work, "I have always seen myself as sketcher who happens now to sketch with more mediums than just pencil. I love perspective, the drama and energy that gives me can explode on a board.
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My love of architecture and its landscape is the subject of a good proportion of paintings, but I still fall back to portraiture when ever I can and am now becoming more interested in the movement and anatomy of animals."
Click HERE for Tim Robinson's biography.
