Denise Ballard-Wyllie ARE - Sakura Kyoto, 2023

£220.00

Screenprint

Media Dimensions: 31.5 x 46 cm

Image Dimensions: 27 x 30 cm

Edition of 40

Unframed

Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork could be from as little as £22.00 (unframed).

Denise Ballard-Wyllie ARE is an associate member of The Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers and Director and Committee Member of The Printmakers’ Council.
She has printmaking degrees and postgraduate qualifications from 3 top London universities, as well as being Research Assistant at The Slade, UCL.
Wyllie has strong links with artists groups in Russia, Puerto Rico & Japan. She has annually participated in Manifestampe’s ‘Fête de l’estampe’ print festival, since 2018, and has worked with Art-Contact Russia-UK 1992-2002.
Ballard-Wyllie creates both wild and orchestrated landscapes’ showing changes of colour and light throughout the seasons. Her artist residency prints, shown here, focus on Chelsea Physic Garden, London’s oldest botanic garden.  These recent prints mark its 350th year anniversary and reflect its continuing importance and delight. These artworks combine lithography with screen-printing.
Beginning by drawing and painting in the open-air allows Ballard-Wyllie to experience nature’s life force that she translates with animated expression. The drawings are taken into the print studio where she pursues these evocative colour ideas further. The artist employs two different approaches: following a predetermined design idea or free-falling, into the unknown and working out solutions to new visual possibilities as they evolve in real time.

Quantity:
Add To Cart

Screenprint

Media Dimensions: 31.5 x 46 cm

Image Dimensions: 27 x 30 cm

Edition of 40

Unframed

Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork could be from as little as £22.00 (unframed).

Denise Ballard-Wyllie ARE is an associate member of The Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers and Director and Committee Member of The Printmakers’ Council.
She has printmaking degrees and postgraduate qualifications from 3 top London universities, as well as being Research Assistant at The Slade, UCL.
Wyllie has strong links with artists groups in Russia, Puerto Rico & Japan. She has annually participated in Manifestampe’s ‘Fête de l’estampe’ print festival, since 2018, and has worked with Art-Contact Russia-UK 1992-2002.
Ballard-Wyllie creates both wild and orchestrated landscapes’ showing changes of colour and light throughout the seasons. Her artist residency prints, shown here, focus on Chelsea Physic Garden, London’s oldest botanic garden.  These recent prints mark its 350th year anniversary and reflect its continuing importance and delight. These artworks combine lithography with screen-printing.
Beginning by drawing and painting in the open-air allows Ballard-Wyllie to experience nature’s life force that she translates with animated expression. The drawings are taken into the print studio where she pursues these evocative colour ideas further. The artist employs two different approaches: following a predetermined design idea or free-falling, into the unknown and working out solutions to new visual possibilities as they evolve in real time.

Screenprint

Media Dimensions: 31.5 x 46 cm

Image Dimensions: 27 x 30 cm

Edition of 40

Unframed

Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork could be from as little as £22.00 (unframed).

Denise Ballard-Wyllie ARE is an associate member of The Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers and Director and Committee Member of The Printmakers’ Council.
She has printmaking degrees and postgraduate qualifications from 3 top London universities, as well as being Research Assistant at The Slade, UCL.
Wyllie has strong links with artists groups in Russia, Puerto Rico & Japan. She has annually participated in Manifestampe’s ‘Fête de l’estampe’ print festival, since 2018, and has worked with Art-Contact Russia-UK 1992-2002.
Ballard-Wyllie creates both wild and orchestrated landscapes’ showing changes of colour and light throughout the seasons. Her artist residency prints, shown here, focus on Chelsea Physic Garden, London’s oldest botanic garden.  These recent prints mark its 350th year anniversary and reflect its continuing importance and delight. These artworks combine lithography with screen-printing.
Beginning by drawing and painting in the open-air allows Ballard-Wyllie to experience nature’s life force that she translates with animated expression. The drawings are taken into the print studio where she pursues these evocative colour ideas further. The artist employs two different approaches: following a predetermined design idea or free-falling, into the unknown and working out solutions to new visual possibilities as they evolve in real time.