Come Away With Me

Out of stock
Regular price £970.00 Sale price £970.00
Tax included. 
Description

Come Away with Me unfolds as a quiet, pared-back landscape, where open water stretches toward the horizon and delicate traces of vegetation punctuate the foreground in gentle strokes of green. Their subtle rhythm guides the eye toward pale, distant mountains, creating a scene that feels both familiar and ethereal.

Acrylic on canvas framed with a white tray frame. 

Size: 30" x 40" (76cm x 102cm).

Location: On display at the gallery.

Frequently bought together

The Artist

Debbie Tearle

""Art is something that makes you breath with a different kind of happiness" - Anni Albers"

Debbie is a self-taught artist working in the outstanding Surrey Hills area. Debbie creates expressive abstract and semi abstract paintings using acrylics and oil and cold wax paints.

"​My work starts with careful observation, using photography and sketches. Through the expression of my visual language of lines and shapes I record what I see and feel. My paintings are initially planned with composition and medium considered, but then I work on the pieces intuitively, responding to the movement of paint and the expressive marks that I make as I'm creating. The colours, textures and patterns found in nature inform choices of palette and substrate. I combine materials that are most suitable for expressing the subject matter for a piece or series of paintings. My imagination and memory informing the development of the painting."

"I like to use standard and non-standard tools on both my paintings on canvas or wood panel and works on paper. Often, they can be stones, rocks, twigs, seed heads that I've collected whilst on walks or ones I'm experimenting with in the studio such as kitchen and diy tools, for example pastry brushes, skewers, bowl scrapers, plastering smoothing tools and screws. I use solvent and scratch between the layers of paint revealing what has been laid down earlier and the history of the work. Glazes of colour are applied to develop the surface and create complexity in the images."

More from Debbie Tearle