Jeremy Gardiner British

"In Gardiner's paintings we find the same sensation as when walking among mountains - of man's staggering insignificance, and the consequent sense of liberation at being so small and so transitory an episode in the greater scheme of things."
Andrew Lambirth
Jeremy Gardiner's artistic excavation of the geology of landscape is shaped both by human activity and by the forces of nature. Gardiner interprets, through his painting and printmaking, a variety of landscapes that contain the marks and secrets of their own distant formation, giving them a unique, contemporary depth and beauty. His artistic exploration has taken him from the Jurassic Coast of Dorset to the rugged coast of Cornwall, the Oceanic islands of Brazil, the arid beauty of the island of Milos in Greece and more recently the Lake District and its numerous waterfalls.
Gardiner's spatially probing and texturally explicit pictures creatively transform the lessons learnt from pioneering modern British landscape painters such as John Tunnard, Ben Nicholson, Peter Lanyon and the American artist Richard Diebenkorn.
Jeremy Gardiner is a graduate of Newcastle University and the Royal College of Art. He exhibits regularly with The Nine British Art gallery in St James's, London. His paintings have been exhibited in Europe, the USA, South America, Japan, Australia and China. He has won numerous awards throughout his career including a Churchill Fellowship, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and a Harkness Fellowship. Gardiner's paintings are represented in public and corporate collections including the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Government Art Collection, BNP Paribas, Pincent Masons and Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi.
In 2013 Gardiner was awarded the prestigious Discerning Eye ING Art prize for Pendeen, the first painting in a series that would evolve into Pillars of Light, his sell-out exhibition which took place in September, 2016 at the Paisnel Gallery, St James's, London. His most recent exhibitions include Drawn to the Coast in 2017, and Tintagel to Lulworth plus Sussex Landscapes in 2019. South by Southwest in October 2020.