Ian Brooks | Twilight in Isfjorden, 2023

from £175.00

Aquatint

Media Dimensions: 25.5 x 21 cm

Image Dimensions: 16 x 13 cm

Edition of 12


Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £25.00.


Ian Brooks’ work is rooted in close observation of the landscape and a fascination with its small-scale details and textures. He aims to evoke the unique atmosphere and sense of place of a specific location and point in time. The work starts with sketches made using pencil and washes of acrylic ink. Back in the studio, the sketches are redrawn directly onto copper plate. Working primarily with sugar lift and spit-bite aquatint, the images are built up in layers of tightly-controlled drawing, and more abstract, semi-random marks which mimic the natural textures of the landscape. While working, Ian finds a constant tension between a natural tendency towards realism and finely rendered detail, and a desire to simplify and abstract the image to achieve a looser rendering that maintains the energy of sketches made in the field. Etching in general, and aquatint in particular, can be rather mercurial processes. The acid bite is subject to a multitude of changeable factors only partly under the artist’s control. To make a successful print requires responding to the vagaries of the process, and ultimately leaving reference material, and sometimes the initial intention, behind, and following the needs of each particular image. Ian was awarded the 2020 New Light Printmaker’s Prize, the Original Print Prize at the ING Discerning Eye exhibition 2020, the People’s Printmaker prize at the Flourish Award for Excellence in Printmaking exhibition, 2022, and a Bursary Prize from the New Light Summer Exhibition 2025.

Select your artwork:

Aquatint

Media Dimensions: 25.5 x 21 cm

Image Dimensions: 16 x 13 cm

Edition of 12


Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £25.00.


Ian Brooks’ work is rooted in close observation of the landscape and a fascination with its small-scale details and textures. He aims to evoke the unique atmosphere and sense of place of a specific location and point in time. The work starts with sketches made using pencil and washes of acrylic ink. Back in the studio, the sketches are redrawn directly onto copper plate. Working primarily with sugar lift and spit-bite aquatint, the images are built up in layers of tightly-controlled drawing, and more abstract, semi-random marks which mimic the natural textures of the landscape. While working, Ian finds a constant tension between a natural tendency towards realism and finely rendered detail, and a desire to simplify and abstract the image to achieve a looser rendering that maintains the energy of sketches made in the field. Etching in general, and aquatint in particular, can be rather mercurial processes. The acid bite is subject to a multitude of changeable factors only partly under the artist’s control. To make a successful print requires responding to the vagaries of the process, and ultimately leaving reference material, and sometimes the initial intention, behind, and following the needs of each particular image. Ian was awarded the 2020 New Light Printmaker’s Prize, the Original Print Prize at the ING Discerning Eye exhibition 2020, the People’s Printmaker prize at the Flourish Award for Excellence in Printmaking exhibition, 2022, and a Bursary Prize from the New Light Summer Exhibition 2025.