Deirdre Dyson: Design is Art
Visitors will discover trompe-l'oeil imagery and subtle gradations of light and colour painstakingly achieved through silk and wool, from sketches originally drawn up in pencil, here translated into oil paintings. The 'Design is Art' series began in lockdown, when, confined to her London apartment, Dyson could draw only on what she could see from her window and her meticulous archive of designs. These included a series of carpet designs (Looking Glass) inspired by the effect of looking at the world through a curved glass bottle - but have gone on to encompass other more abstract distillations of visual experience - such as the multi-coloured ribbons that evoke a line of Can-Can dancers, in her 2023 Angles series. Seizing on paint's potential to create multiple overlapping layers of colour, Dyson has transformed these complex geometric patterns and imagery drawn from natural phenomena into a series of vibrant art works. Dyson reports that part of the excitement has been experimenting with scale and colour contrasts, without the need to conform to the conventional dimensions and tonal range of carpetry. All the art works reflect her interest in pattern, movement, light and shadow, and the multifarious impacts of refracted light on form and colour.
Dyson trained at the Byam Shaw School of Arts, and then Wimbledon College of Art, where she took a three year diploma in illustration and graphic design. Since then she has continued to paint alongside her design work. Her distinctive practice combines a fascination for the natural phenomena of water, light and reflection, achieved through a free handling of paint, with a strong command of geometry, colour and pattern. These interests have fed directly into Dyson's distinctive carpets.
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Visitors will discover trompe-l'oeil imagery and subtle gradations of light and colour painstakingly achieved through silk and wool, from sketches originally drawn up in pencil, here translated into oil paintings. The 'Design is Art' series began in lockdown, when, confined to her London apartment, Dyson could draw only on what she could see from her window and her meticulous archive of designs. These included a series of carpet designs (Looking Glass) inspired by the effect of looking at the world through a curved glass bottle - but have gone on to encompass other more abstract distillations of visual experience - such as the multi-coloured ribbons that evoke a line of Can-Can dancers, in her 2023 Angles series. Seizing on paint's potential to create multiple overlapping layers of colour, Dyson has transformed these complex geometric patterns and imagery drawn from natural phenomena into a series of vibrant art works. Dyson reports that part of the excitement has been experimenting with scale and colour contrasts, without the need to conform to the conventional dimensions and tonal range of carpetry. All the art works reflect her interest in pattern, movement, light and shadow, and the multifarious impacts of refracted light on form and colour.
Dyson trained at the Byam Shaw School of Arts, and then Wimbledon College of Art, where she took a three year diploma in illustration and graphic design. Since then she has continued to paint alongside her design work. Her distinctive practice combines a fascination for the natural phenomena of water, light and reflection, achieved through a free handling of paint, with a strong command of geometry, colour and pattern. These interests have fed directly into Dyson's distinctive carpets.