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Biography
Freya Wood was an art scholar at Marlborough College and subsequently studied the MA Fine Art course at Edinburgh University, at the Charles Cecil Studios in Florence and at The Royal Drawing School in London. Aged 19 she exhibited 40 landscape paintings in her first solo show at the Mount House Gallery Marlborough. She has since exhibited at 20 Hoxton Square, the Sladmore Gallery and at Christies.
Her works are in the collection of HRH The Prince of Wales, HRH The Duchess of Cornwall, the Right Honourable Boris Johnson, the Right Honourable Lord Mandelson and Brigadier Andrew Parker Bowles.
Freya’s work is characterised by her specific obsession with Wiltshire Landscape. Working ‘en plein air,’ and out of a studio which sits at the foot of the Iron Age Hill fort of Martinsel, Freya employs her highly idiosyncratic technique of combining watercolour, gouache, ink, and gum arabic, to recreate the details of the natural world from which she draws her inspiration
Freya’s chosen subjects are places imbued with both cosmic and emotional charge. Cosmic due to their history and pre history, emotional due to the association of some specific sensation, memory or event buried alive in the psyche of artist, who was raised in this country renowned for its high downland and wide valleys, and uniquely rich Neolithic past.
Freya searches for ‘motifs’ in the landscape which hold some potent, dreamlike or inexplicable meaning. These she repeatedly returns to, in the same way that Paul Nash found ‘presences’ hidden everywhere in the landscape that inspired him. He called them ‘personages’-standing or fallen objects that seemed to him to give off a mysterious power. To Freya, objects detach themselves from the landscape and become ‘looming protagonists in strange encounters’ . Her paintings are profuse with these ‘personages,’ the presences of Beech Clump thickets, Fir plantations or the silhouettes of ancient landmarks seem almost animated as they communicate their strange meaning to the viewer.
The archaeology and history of Wiltshire is unique, with remnants of ancient civilisations and, more recently, a military past having preserved some of the iconic landscape features seen there today, the spiritual and historical significance of which have long since gripped Freya’s imagination. Ancient Hill forts, Tumuli, Earth works, dykes and mounds form a fascinating topography- and ‘lie on the rising ground so commonly’ that the youthful Richard Jeffries (19th Century Nature Writer and Chronicler of Wiltshire) found the land ‘alive with the dead’
Two thirds of Wiltshire lies on chalk. A soft, porous limestone, resistant to erosion which has built some of the most spectacular scarp and downland scenery in England. The writer HJ Massingham compared the scarps to the flanks of a horse, while Terry Pratchett, who was also a Wiltshire dweller, said that there was something oceanic about the downs, and that this was hardly surprising considering the glaciers, and the innumerable sea creatures within them, which carved out the Pewsey Vale and which, over centuries became its chalk.
The mystical quality of this downland was well described by Richard Jefferies in ‘The story of my Heart.’ Jefferies, who had an epiphany on nearby Liddington Hill, described the rapture into which he himself once fell ‘ I came upon other trees, other worldlyness...I was not more than eighteen when an inner and esoteric meaning began to come to me from all the visible universe, and indefinable aspirations filled me. I found them in the grass fields, under the trees, on the hill tops, at sunrise, and in the night. There was a deeper meaning everywhere.’
Exhibitions
2023 Solo Exhibition 'Second Spring' Golden Lion Gallery
2022 Solo Exhibition 'Spirit of Place' Golden Lion Gallery
2022 Spring Exhibition, British Art Portfolio
2021 Summer Exhibition of British Art, British Art Portfolio
2019 Summer Exhibition, Laura Lopes
2018 Summer Exhibition, Laura Lopes
2017 Summer Exhibition, Laura Lopes
2015 Charles Cecil Group show, Talgarth road Studios
2013 Alumni Show, Prince Of Wales Drawing school, Christies
2011 Group Show, Sladmore Gallery , Bruton Street
2008 Group Show, 20 Hoxton Square gallery
2007 Solo Exhibition, Mount House gallery, Marlborough
1999 Children's exhibition, Rebecca Hosack Gallery, Windmill street
'Miss Freya Wood’s extraordinary devotion to the fetishization of the English landscape gives her work a distinctive power. Her conscious lack of irony - the revitilizing agent of the cliché - might present some initial challenges to the modern spectator but once they will give themselves over, to what Susan Sontag felicitiously called dynamic contemplation, they will be swept along by the nearly manicial urgency to capture that most fleeting permanence, the undulating whorls and contours of English parkland.'
Menno Meyjes