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A Study in Black and Gold #1 (2025)

Annette Marie Townsend
£14,500.00

‘A Study in Black and Gold #1’ features scrambling blackberry (Rubus fructicosus) plants in white, delicately sculpted using traditional wax flower making techniques, and dried insect specimens donated by a museum curator, mounted inside American lime and glass entomology cabinet drawers.

 

In this piece, the blackberries which in the wild provide an important source of nectar for pollinators,
appear to be growing inside the entomology drawer alongside the preserved bee specimens, highlighting
their mutually beneficial relationship. 

 

Created exclusively for Collect 2025 and in response to the curatorial theme of Black and Gold, these monotone sculptures draw on the internationally renowned blackberry (Rubus) collection at the National Museum of Wales. To reflect this, the drawer is labelled by the artist as if part of a scientific collection.

 

Townsend's own observations of nature within the urban environment combine with her memories and experiences as a natural science conservator to create works that are scientifically accurate, yet artistically stunning - drawing us, through art, into a consideration and conversation about nature and its fragile beauty.

 

The piece can be be wall mounted or displayed flat and can be bought individually or as a pair. 

A Study in Black and Gold #2 (2025)

Annette Marie Townsend
£14,500.00

‘A Study in Black and Gold #2’ features scrambling blackberry (Rubus fructicosus) plants in black, delicately sculpted using traditional wax flower making techniques, and dried insect specimens donated by a museum curator, mounted inside American lime and glass entomology cabinet drawers.

 

In this piece, the blackberries which in the wild provide an important source of nectar for pollinators,
appear to be growing inside the entomology drawer alongside the preserved bee specimens, highlighting
their mutually beneficial relationship. 

 

Created exclusively for Collect 2025 and in response to the curatorial theme of Black and Gold, these monotone sculptures draw on the internationally renowned blackberry (Rubus) collection at the National Museum of Wales. To reflect this, the drawer is labelled by the artist as if part of a scientific collection.

 

Townsend's own observations of nature within the urban environment combine with her memories and experiences as a natural science conservator to create works that are scientifically accurate, yet artistically stunning - drawing us, through art, into a consideration and conversation about nature and its fragile beauty.

 

The piece can be be wall mounted or displayed flat and can be bought individually or as a pair. 

All in Vain

Ruth Petersen
£1,550.00

A ‘hand woven’ sculpture shaped by the heat of the kiln to bring the viewer inside the built environment. 

 

Petersen creates these delicate structures by weaving a stainless steel or metal mesh which she then dips into ceramic slip. The sculptural distortions created by the intense heat of firing, create pieces that are at once unexpected, beguiling and uncomfortable - confronting us with the fragility of our constructed world and issues of living on the edge of safety through sculptures with a rare and delicate beauty. 

 

 

Created for Collect 2025, ‘All in Vain’ is one of an ongoing series of sculptures created by Petersen to highlight the inadequacies and inequalities of our current housing system. 

 

With the addition of black crystals and gold highlights to meet our curatorial theme of Black and Gold, she extends that conversation to denote the mould that creeps across the surface of inadequate housing, but adds gold to reflect the hope for change. 

 

This piece is no longer for sale but, if you would like to commission a similar piece, please enquire below. 

Barely There (2)

Ruth Petersen
£1,200.00

Barely There (2) - a ceramic sculpture created from a hand woven metal mesh dipped in ceramic slip and fired at high temperature to create the distortions seen within the sculpture. 

 

With an almost ethereal quality, the sculptures are both beautiful, beguiling and thought provoking.

 

A response to the curatorial brief of Black and Gold, Barely There (2) is part of a continuing series of work where Petersen draws our attention, through art, to the fragility of our built environment and the experience of many as they live on the edge of safety in inadequate housing. 

 

Drawing attention to these issues is a fundamental element of Petersen's work, but in doing so she creates pieces of intricate detail and with the meticulous attention to detail and experimentation that is typical of this emerging and gifted ceramicist. 

Night Time Dreams

Ruth Petersen
£1,300.00

A ‘hand woven’ sculpture shaped by the heat of the kiln to bring the viewer inside the built environment. 

 

To create these delicate sculptures, Petersen weaves a metal ‘fabric’ dipped in a ceramic slip. The sculptural distortions result from the intense heat of firing, so that the pieces are always unique, unexpected and uncomfortable - confronting us with the fragility of our constructed world through sculptures of a rare and delicate beauty. 

 

Created for Collect 2025, Night Time Dreams is one of an ongoing series of sculptures created by Petersen to highlight the inadequacies and inequalities of our current housing system. 

 

With the addition of black crystals and gold highlights to meet our curatorial theme of Black and Gold, she extends that conversation to denote the mould that creeps across the surface of inadequate housing, but adds gold to reflect the hope for change. 

Night Time Dreams (2)

Ruth Petersen
£1,550.00

A ‘hand woven’ sculpture shaped by the heat of the kiln to bring the viewer inside the built environment. 

 

Petersen 'builds' the internal structure to her work by weaving a metal fabric which she then dips into ceramic slip - the sculptural distortions created within the kiln as the metal reacts to the intense heat of firing.  

 

Ruth uses her work to draw attention to the fragility of our constructed world and Night Time Dreams, created for Collect 2025, highlights the inadequacies and inequalities of our current housing system. 

 

The black crystals and gold leaf are a specific addition to her work for Collect 2025 and reflect her constant experimentation with materials to amplify her story through these beautiful and fragile sculptures. 

Brooch Box

Rebecca Oldfield
£8,315.00

Sterling silver jewellery box with brooch and earrings.

 

The simple, chased lines of this elegant jewellery box by Rebecca Oldfield, belies its ingenuity with two beautiful jewellery pieces hidden within. 

 

The box is skilfully crafted to create the perfect storage for a chased silver brooch and a stunning pair of silver and 18 ct gold earrings with diamond decoration, two small hooks enabling the earrings to hang freely within it. 

 

A brooch pin is cleverly concealed within the lid of the box - meticulously chased to align with the chasing on the base of the box - to transform it into a stunning and wearable piece of art. 

Rhaeadr (Waterfall)

Rauni Higson
£9,800.00

A beautiful decorative wall piece inspired by the waterfalls of Wales.

 

'Rhaeadr' translates as waterfall or cascade and this piece captures the movement of the water as it plummets over a sheer shelf of rock to a pool below. 

 

The patination cleverly captures the rich flora and fauna of the surrounding rock and its architectural structure.

 

This work was created specifically for Collect 2025 and is a departure from the work for which Higson is more widely known. But her fascination and love for the mountainous terrain of North Wales underpins this piece, the meticulous detail typical of her work and key to capturing the beauty and mystique of the waterfall and its environs.