Artist Profile - Boo Mallinson

Summer Landscape I
Warm Path II
Summer Landscape II
Gentle Day II
Gentle Day I

Summer Landscape I

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Measurements: 33.5 x 79 cm framed

Price: £850 plus delivery

Warm Path II

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Measurements: 64 x 79 cm framed

Price: £1,800 plus delivery

Summer Landscape II

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Measurements: 94 x 94 cm framed

Price: £2,800 plus delivery

Gentle Day II

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Measurements: 53 x 53 cm framed

Price: £950 plus delivery

Gentle Day I

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Measurements: 53 x 53 cm framed

Price: £950 plus delivery

Summer Landscape I

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Measurements: 33.5 x 79 cm framed

Year:

Price: £850 plus delivery

Click for larger image...

About Boo Mallinson
Artist Statement

Summer Landscape I
Warm Path II
Summer Landscape II
Gentle Day II
Gentle Day I
Summer Landscape I
Warm Path II
Summer Landscape II
Gentle Day II
Gentle Day I

Biography

Boo’s paintings act as a visual diary and a way of recording her everyday walks and journeys through the landscape. When walking we absorb the sights, sounds and smells and they come together to form a very strong memory of place. Our minds can drift and wander yet we are very much in the present. Memories of a repeated walk along a known pathway, the distant horizon, the dramatic changes of colour and light from one moment to the next, day to day, season to season, these immersive encounters with the natural world form the starting point of Boo’s paintings. 


Artist Statement

Some paintings remain very close to their origins, hinting at a place visited or remembered. These paintings are often smaller and more gestural, translating an idea quickly and embracing chance and accident. Other paintings evolve slowly and are reworked, building up the surface organically and allowing Boo to translate ambiguous images into new compositions. They are still about a visual encounter with the landscape yet there is a process of simplification, allowing her to explore colour and abstraction and to move intuitively between the real and the imaginary. This ambiguity allows the viewer the freedom to put their own interpretation into the paintings and be reminded of their own experiences of being within the landscape