Despite often being led by his material, there are times when he has a set idea and wants to see it through. In one triptych, he shows a bird’s-eye-view of where a curving waterway in the Norfolk Fens turns into a straight channel. This man made intervention in the landscape is reflected in the piece itself, where the excavated bog oak tiles, which show the wood’s ethereal, gleaming beauty, are maneuvered by him to create a specific effect. The texture and tactility of the gently shimmering wooden shingles are part of his artworks’ attraction. “A lot of the wood’s soul can be lost when it’s too perfect. I think there is a danger, having come from a making background, to overwork things. But the material here is absolutely raw. And I think this definitely helps the viewers to connect with the work.”
The artist is currently showing a three-paneled screen, Hundred Foot Drain/Annie’s Wood, in Venice as part of Homo Faber. The work is a foray into creating something functional without distracting from the texture and color of the wood – in this case felled holly and excavated bog. Private commissions are pouring in and are keeping him busy in his workshop in Wales. “Next, I am going to work on a series of spheres turned from adjacent sections of an ash tree that has been part of the view from my workshop but is now in the late stages of ash dieback,” he says, referring to the fungus causing large-scale ash tree decline. “Otherwise, I want to experiment with the format of my tiled panels so that they create shapes in their own right.”