Pamela Hare
Pamela is an artist and printmaker living in Islington, London. Her interests include the interaction between urban views as inspired by the City; London, Venice and Marrakesh and by the timeless beauty of seascapes. She is influenced by the myriad richness of colours, contrasts of light, atmospheres and by architectural styles, from Georgian to post-modern and metropolitan cultures and histories.
Pamela’s recent paintings and prints contain images of man-made materials in a naturalistic setting and nature’s response; the beauty of decay illustrated by the infusion of rust coloured hues into a wooden breakwater; the challenging placing of industrial iconic tyres into an estuary sunset; the capture of transient fragmentary images such as the breaking of a wave; and the ambiguity of perspective such as walking into the past surrounded by industrial structures.
Pamela’s work traces the architectural fabric and lay-lines connecting past to present, from church spire to glass citadel and from the smooth liquid surfaces to hard granulated textured images. Her approaches include investigating the relationship between mono and photo-screen printed and painted shapes; the layering of pixelated and textural surfaces and contrasting vibrant colour hues with aged patinas.
Pamela’s recent paintings and prints contain images of man-made materials in a naturalistic setting and nature’s response; the beauty of decay illustrated by the infusion of rust coloured hues into a wooden breakwater; the challenging placing of industrial iconic tyres into an estuary sunset; the capture of transient fragmentary images such as the breaking of a wave; and the ambiguity of perspective such as walking into the past surrounded by industrial structures.
Pamela’s work traces the architectural fabric and lay-lines connecting past to present, from church spire to glass citadel and from the smooth liquid surfaces to hard granulated textured images. Her approaches include investigating the relationship between mono and photo-screen printed and painted shapes; the layering of pixelated and textural surfaces and contrasting vibrant colour hues with aged patinas.