Walter Gotschke was without doubt one of the worlds greatest automotive artists. His loose impressionistic style was underpinned by superb draughtsmanship.
This fabulous signed print, London 1935, was one of a series that Gotschke painted of the capital cities.
Pamela Kay is one of Britain’s most popular still life painters. She is a member of the Royal Watercolour Society, the Royal Society of British Artists and the New English Art Club.
This signed, limited edition print has been sympathetically framed with a contrasting acid-free double mount.
This small watercolour of Trent Fields, Nottingham, was an exercise in creating space and atmosphere as simply as possible.
A fairly wide simple double mount allows the watercolour to breathe. The warm pastel shade of the inner mount picks up on and echoes the warm tones in the foreground.
This beautiful watercolour, which was hung in the Nottingham Castle Art Gallery in the 1932 Local Artists competition, was starting to look a bit jaded. The glass had become dirty on the inside and the edges of the mount had turned brown over time. All it took to bring it back to life was a new double mount and a good clean!