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A Methodist Minister who was introduced to woodcarving in 1987 by Santiago Bell, David began carving seriously in 1994. Many of his projects are done in conjunction with Richard Smith, an ex-colleague from East London. They describe their work as ‘exploring stories and themes from biblical material as experienced through our working lives’.
He has exhibited in London, Oxford, Bristol, Derby, Sheffield and Milton Keynes.
Born in London, Arun studied Japanese language and literature and worked in investment management in Hong Kong, Tokyo and London for 10 years. Then she had a change of direction to pursue other creative interests, first in ceramics and more recently in glass.
The original impulse for her glass sculpture ‘Blackbird’ came from a Beatles song; she was struck by the image of a lone voice singing urgently when the world is asleep:
Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these broken wings and learn to fly
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to arise
Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these sunken eyes and learn to see
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to be free
Blackbird fly, blackbird fly
Into the light of a dark black night.
When she heard about the Resisting Tyranny exhibition, she saw a connection with her sculpture. “My father fled Vienna and Nazi rule for Britain at the age of 15; his parents perished in Poland. Most people looked the other way but a few, like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, found the courage to speak out in that dark time.”
Philip is an Anglican priest who combines his work in several parishes with that of a part-time Diocesan Officer. He has drawn and painted all his life, his greater skill being that of the cartoon. Philip has drawn a cartoon for this exhibition.
Ernesto is an Anglican priest. He studied art in his native Peru, winning several awards. In 1983 he embarked on studies in theology and anthropology. The rising political tensions of his country finally forced Ernesto into exile in 1987. He spent some time in Brazil and Spain before adopting England as his home.
In 1990 Ernesto returned to painting and has built up a substantial body of work, finding a distinctive style which reveals both the richness of his native culture and the influence of Western tradition. His paintings have been exhibited in Europe and the UK and are held in private collections in the UK, Germany and the United States, and in public collections including at the World Bank Washington DC, Northern Light Gallery London Heathrow Airport, and Wycliffe Hall Oxford. |