Sarah Needham Artist
  • Home
  • About
  • Small Ports and Sea Coves, the Blue Collection
  • From the Earth and Sea
  • Windows
  • Archaeologies
  • Space and Balance
  • Responses
  • From Alchemy to Chemistry
  • Making Decisions in the Dark
  • Captured Ships Collection
  • Corby Glen Project
  • Cobalt Collection, from the Vauxhall Potters to the British Museum
  • Bristol Presentiments 1770
  • Lost Girl Gallery
  • Space In Between Gallery
  • Deptford Gallery
  • Light and Dark
  • Indigo Gallery
  • Letters From a Strange Year
  • Contact
  • 3 D Gallery
  • On line presence
  • Roy’s People Art Fair
  • Blog
  • IN THE STUDIO
  • Commissioning artwork
  • Blog
  • New Page
  • Video
  • New in the Studio
  • Home
  • About
  • Small Ports and Sea Coves, the Blue Collection
  • From the Earth and Sea
  • Windows
  • Archaeologies
  • Space and Balance
  • Responses
  • From Alchemy to Chemistry
  • Making Decisions in the Dark
  • Captured Ships Collection
  • Corby Glen Project
  • Cobalt Collection, from the Vauxhall Potters to the British Museum
  • Bristol Presentiments 1770
  • Lost Girl Gallery
  • Space In Between Gallery
  • Deptford Gallery
  • Light and Dark
  • Indigo Gallery
  • Letters From a Strange Year
  • Contact
  • 3 D Gallery
  • On line presence
  • Roy’s People Art Fair
  • Blog
  • IN THE STUDIO
  • Commissioning artwork
  • Blog
  • New Page
  • Video
  • New in the Studio

Bristol Presentiments 1770

 “The Bristol Presentiments 1770” series, she has chosen to use only the pigments imported into Bristol from January-June 1770,  about one hundred years after the first recorded, though illegal Bristol ship traded along the transatlantic triangle and 72 years since the first legally traded ship traded to the Americas from Bristol.

Sarah Needham uses historically resonant pigments in hand made oil paint to make abstract abstract works to create absorbing spaces. Spaces to fall into to get a little lost in and to remember. 

By using these materials from a formative period in Bristol’s past she is creating quiet conversations with the viewers current lived experience and this period in Bristol and the surrounding area. Sarah Needham invites you to fall into the spaces created in her work, making connections and getting a little lost in your own memories. These works are of this place, and of course are of the globe. ​Sarah’s work weaves between lost pasts that have been elided and makes space for the untold stories of Bristol.  

Sarah has a background in Art and Development Studies and a long term interest in the impact of trade on people and place.  There is a sense that “modern” Bristol began in the 1700s with the changing of the law allowing ships owned by Society of Merchant Venturers to participate in the transatlantic trade, the slave trade triangle.  Looking through the Bristol Presentiment papers of 1770, Sarah chose the first six months that they were published, and made her images using only pigments which were imported during that time, they include indigo, ochres, vermillion, madder and lead white. The oil painting media that were also imported include linseed, linseed oil, turpentine, resin, beeswax, wood, linen and cotton. In terms of the developments in painting and mark making, Bristol was one of the first cities outside London to have its own colour-men, specialist paint and pigment suppliers, three are  listed in the 1775 street directory, along with three limners (expert paint makers and painters of miniatures) and seven painters, one china painter, twelve potters, nine dyers and a wide range of other craft trades related to these imports. 

Sarah’s abstract images are full of resonance.  Through the physical act of making these paints this body of work sits within a paradigm that is anchored within the geographical and historical context of Bristol.

​

Telephone

02084445173

Email                                                                                       

sarahneedham@artfromlondonmarkets.com             
Picture
Picture