Thank you to everyone who visited Kittie Jones’ artist residency exhibition
You can view the new collection of Fenland works here:
Fen Ditton Gallery are delighted to welcome award-winning wildlife artist and regular gallery exhibitor, Kittie Jones, to take up residency this May, and we invite you to the end of residency Open Studio on the 1st and 2nd June.
Kittie will also be holding a one-day ‘Dynamic Drawing’ workshop on Friday 31st May. More details can be found here.
Kittie Jones is an artist based in Edinburgh. She graduated from Edinburgh College of Art and Edinburgh University in 2008; she currently works from her studio in Leith and regularly exhibits around the UK. Kittie was elected as a professional member of the Society of Wildlife Artists in 2016 and has been a professional member of Visual Arts Scotland since 2013. Kittie has won a number of awards for her work, most recently she was awarded the William J Macaulay / Scottish Gallery Award for her piece Gannets over the Atlantic at the Royal Scottish Academy Annual Exhibition 2021. Her monotype Feeding Curlew was awarded the RSPB Award at the Natural Eye exhibition at the Mall Galleries in London in 2018.
Kittie's practice focuses on drawing and printmaking – she produces mixed media drawings on paper out in the landscape, unique multi-layered monotypes and small edition screen prints. Kittie is inspired by the full sensory experience of time spent outdoors, most often along the East coast of Scotland. Much of her work is completed outside and other sketches provide a starting point for prints and studio drawings.
'My work is concerned with the experience of time spent looking and interpreting the natural world. I am drawn to places that have an abundance of nature – sea bird colonies, fertile coastlines and remote islands. On drawing trips I will settle in a promising spot and start to develop work from there. The energy in the work comes from the constantly changing elements of the natural world – birds moving in and out of vision and the shifting quality of weather and light. My attempts to capture the change are what interests me, as well as my enchantment with a world which, as a human, I will only ever occupy the edge of.'