- Art & Culture - Festival - What's On

Henley Festival reveals this year’s visual arts programme

Henley Festival reveals this year’s visual arts programme, featuring one of Britain’s best-selling figurative painters Mark Demsteader, the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize and Archibald People’s Choice Award-winning artist Esther Erlich, and sculptor Holly Bendall, who creates striking bronzes including a Greenpeace-supported permanent public installation that can be experienced in Porthleven.

This year’s line-up showcases an array of fine art, ceramics, sculptures, photography, prints, paintings and light installations. The riverside in Henley will transform into an outdoor gallery, displaying works by some of the UK’s most celebrated artists, as well as the next generation of talent participating in the Festival’s charitable initiative RISE.

Image Not Found
Holly Bendall

The Ruby Gallery is set to host an exhibition of world-class art, including pieces from Haut de Gamme, an international platform for the original artwork, prints, and installations by Alexander Hall. Who aged just 22 was commissioned by Peter Jones CBE to create all of the artwork for his international offices and has since gone on to become one of the world’s most recognised multimedia artists and the visionary polymath, Tayo Irvine Hendrix, who blends fine art, music and spirituality to create multi-faceted works of spiritual exploration.

The Ruby Gallery will also feature curated collections from: The Barker Gallery, an esteemed hub for contemporary art founded by Jon Barker; I Spy Contemporary, founded by Festival favourite Tommy Gurr, will be showcasing works from their roster of urban and contemporary street artist; West End gallery Panter & Hall is back to the riverside to exhibit a selection of their leading contemporary artists including Mark Demsteader, Simon Laurie, Esther Erlich and Edward Seago; Amber Galleries will be adding Henley Festival to their beautifully crafted gallery destinations; and the independent and artist-led gallery, Punchbowl Gallery, will be exhibiting their contemporary paintings, prints and sculptures.

Image Not Found
I Spy Contemporary

Meanwhile, The Festival Gallery will feature artist, surfer and traveller Nina Brooke, who will be bringing her jewel-like paintings that capture unique aerial perspectives of the world’s most picturesque seas, beaches and shorelines, and The Drang Gallery will delight festivalgoers with their range of modern masters and new emerging talent.  

In the Audi High RISE Gallery, Audi are championing emerging artistic talent through their support of the Festival’s charitable initiative RISE. Three visual artists, Cheltenham-based Jackson’s Emerging Artist Award winner and landscape painter Conrad P Clarke, winner of the 2019 Phyllis Roberts Prize and 2022 Young Artist Award Robert Ware, and Amie Elizabeth Wolo, who won the 2023 Woman in Art Prize’s Susan Angoy Award will all be exhibiting, each representing a spectrum of creative inspiration, artistic approaches, backgrounds, ages and abilities.

Image Not Found
Amie Elizabeth Wolo

Audi’s support of new talent extends to the Festival’s riverside Sculpture Garden, where RISE sculptor Beatrice Galletley, an award-winning, London-based ceramic artist inspired by the juxtaposition of geometric and organic forms, will have her pieces on display. Festival goers will be able to enjoy further work from leading sculptors including Marlow’s Fi Hunter and her larger-than-life sculpted heads that explore the fragility and strength of the human condition. RIBA registered architect Mike Clancy brings his figurative, abstract and conceptual artworks that bridge the gap between art and architecture, citing influences such as Picasso and Richard Serra.

Image Not Found
Beth Rusby – The Ship of Fools

There are further installations on display courtesy of sculptor Christopher Townsend, who is inspired by the agricultural environment of his Oxfordshire studio; Simon Probyn who creates bespoke industrial sculpture for the landscape; Cornwall artist Holly Bendall whose passion for public art can be seen in her bronze masterpiece Waiting for Fish, which was supported by Greenpeace and unveiled by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall in Porthleven; Fred Gordon’s award-winning bronzes created with the historical lost wax method; elegant yet playful figurative human and animal sculptures by Helen Gordon; contemporary fine art gallery Hanoi Art House will be showcasing the life-sized creations of Len Gifford; Australian-born, Henley-based sculptor Beth Rusby presents her clever and witty sculptures created out of cardboard and paper; Clare Bigger captures the spontaneity and fluidity of movement in her stainless steel-forms; and whether abstracted or realistic, Nicola Godden’s sculptures take inspiration from the beauty of human figure.

Image Not Found
Atelier Sisu

On the Riverside Lawn, Atelier Sisu will be displaying their magnificent, larger-than-life bubble artwork Evanescent, iridescent in daylight and illuminated in nighttime accompanied by an ethereal soundscape.

For more information visit Henley Festival 2024

Share:
X