Balancing the gift 40 x 40cm oil & mixed media on canvas £550
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What secret stays 35 x 35cm drawing £350 SOLD
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Mark Spray was born in Derbyshire and moved to West Cornwall in 2000. He was a student at Manchester Metropolitan University (1992-95) and Goldsmiths College, London (1998-99). He is now a dedicated artist living and working in the wild moorland areas of Cornwall, Devon and Derbyshire.
His work is heavily influenced by poetry, particularly that of the late Poet-Laureate, Ted Hughes.
The Great Atlantic Galleries in St Just and in Falmouth have, since early 2007, presented Mark Sprays Moorland and Strata series (the former inspired by Ted Hughes); his Unearth collection, driven by American poet, Paul Auster; and Ill invite the poets (a whole host of them) - a perceptive collection of work based on an obscure valley near Lands End in Cornwall.
Sprays latest collection comprises more than 40 paintings and drawings inspired by Hughes collection of 21 poems on the theme of the Greek legend of Prometheus on his Crag. In Greek mythology, Prometheus was a champion of human-kind known for his wily intelligence, who stole fire from Zeus and gave it to mortals. Zeus then punished him for his crime by having him bound to a rock while a great eagle ate his liver every day only to have it grow back to be eaten again the next day.
Over the centuries this legend has inspired many artists to portray Prometheus and his gory plight. These include the painters Dirck van Baburen, Jacob Jordaens, Gustave Moreau and Peter Paul Rubens and the sculptors Nicolas-Sébastien Adam and Scott Eaton.
The combination of the legend, Hughes poetry and the barren wilderness of Dartmoor led Spray to embark on a multi-faceted project. One that has involved numerous 250 mile round-trip visits to Dartmoor from his West Cornwall home; many epic treks across the sparse upland landscape and a number of overnight bivouacs on the moor.
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