Soft launching. More makers all summer.Soft launching with our founding makers. More arriving through the summer.

“I paint abstract oils. Colour, mood, and the bursts of energy between shapes.”
Jessica Linley paints in oil and works small. Five pieces on her shelf at the moment, none larger than 40 centimetres on the longest side, each one finished and set aside before the next begins. She paints on board and on panel, sometimes building a still life through fractured planes that almost cohere, sometimes letting colour move first and form catch up. The work is abstract in the strict sense: nothing in it is asking to be identified.
What that means for the room these paintings end up in is harder to say in advance. "Traces in Twilight" sets neon green against dusky blue and grey, with a muted red carried along the edges. "Refigurement 1" reads almost like a still life seen through cracked glass, planes overlapping until the objects underneath go quiet. "Drift Between Colour" lets colour move instinctively and stops where it wants to. The titles do a lot of work in setting up where each piece sits emotionally, and Jessica leaves it there. She does not over-explain.
I came across her work through The Haud's open process and what struck me first was the restraint inside the colour. There is a temptation, in abstract painting at this scale, to make everything loud. Jessica's pieces hold a quieter register inside the brighter passages: a piece of muted red tucked behind the green, a grey layer that the eye finds only on second viewing. The brushwork is expressive without being theatrical. Each painting is one of a kind, signed, and sold unframed so a buyer can choose how to set it.
The studio scale here is small. These are paintings you live with in a hallway, above a desk, propped on a mantelpiece. They are not statement pieces in the auction-house sense. They are something else: small, finished, considered, and entirely her own.


Behind the work
