Artist
Gerald Dewsbury
BA Hons Fine Art, Falmouth School of Art.
Moved to North Wales for a wilder and more varied landscape from which he continues to draw inspiration. However, since 1982 Gerald has travelled widely around the UK and beyond. In 2005 he completed six landscapes for The Sultan of Oman for the new palace in Muscat.
Gerald Dewsbury’s work is in numerous private and public collections including The Grosvenor Museum, Chester and The Museum of Modern Art Wales. He has won many prizes and in 2003 was elected as a member of the RCA.
“My artwork spans a broad spectrum – from introspective perceptions through to symbolic and romantic landscapes. My subjects and concerns stem primarily from my own particular perception of what I see about me and how I relate to it.”
£2,800.00
Gerald Dewsbury
Oil on canvas. 62 x 82cm
Framed
Aldon Gutter was a new discovery; with its old buildings and some fine mature trees it still retains an archaic quality. This for me is not a bad thing. It seems like an oasis and still has a good mix of interesting flora and fauna which have managed to survive the ravages of time.
£2,100.00
Gerald Dewsbury
Oil on canvas. 77 x 36cm
Framed
Caer Caradoc has an appeal that is hard to explain. It obviously has a character and a history all of its own which demands to be contemplated. Each time I climb it I find myself reflecting, not only on Caer Caradoc, but on some aspect of my life also… It must be something to do with the steep slopes, and whilst carrying all my necessary painting gear, the slow plodding required to get up it.
£3,900.00
Gerald Dewsbury
Oil on canvas. 92 x 92cm
Framed
Ynyslas, near Borth, is one of those special places I visit regularly. It is situated at the mouth of the Dovey Estuary. Standing on this spit of sand it seems as if things are timeless and yet everything constantly changes with the ebb and flow of the tide. There is a primordial quality here…..but it is also one of those places listed to ‘not be here any more’ by 2050 due to Sea Level Rise.
Further out, when the tides are low, can be seen the remains of a fossilised forest.