magazine, exhibitions and projects
the flux review
Mary C – Q&A
Mary C is a photographer from Italy who is working on a number of projects including ‘If I Were’ – a Limited ed. of 25 printed books that are combined with audio that represents the intimate and profound experience of rape. It is a photographic project on the responsive woman, the unresolved female figure between an obsolescent model and the present that at times doesn’t match closely enough, at others’ life bites, to the point of taking away her individual voice.
Angela Heisch
Pippy Houldsworth Gallery is delighted to present Burgeon and Remain, the first UK solo exhibition of young New Zealand-born, New York-based artist Angela Heisch. This body of work, including paintings on a new larger scale, develops the artist’s abstracted visual...
Hazel Roberts – Q&A
Hazel Roberts is an artist based in Manchester who specialises in creating multi-layered complex screenprints.
Her work features both geometric and painterly forms, creating energy through gestural marks and bold use of colour. Images explore the personal, the political, and always playful, as she tries to bite back from all the bad advice given in art school.
Leonard Green – Q&A
Born in the northwest of England in a ‘cotton’ and ‘mining’ town – Leigh near Wigan. Len Green studied Foundation Art at Wigan School of Art then studied BA (Hons) Fine Art (Painting) at Manchester University followed by MA studies in Fine Art (Painting) also at Manchester. Amongst the exhibitions, Green was involved in during this time in the late 70s and 80s was a one-man show at the Turnpike Gallery in Leigh, Greater Manchester; a prestigious, contemporary art gallery. Green has exhibited widely across the UK including the Royal Academy
Coralie Huon – Q&A
Coralie Huon is a multi-disciplinary creative, artist, and illustrator, exploring her passion for visual storytelling via various mediums, from illustrations, products, or larger scale installations and murals. Huon loves to transform concepts and stories into...
Noga Shatz – Q&A
Noga Shatz is a London-based multidisciplinary artist specializing in painting and printmaking. She obtained her MFA degree with distinction from the Slade School of Fine Art, University College London 2015, and her BA from HaMidrasha – Faculty of the Arts, Israel 2007.
Nimisha Doongarwal – Q&A
Nimisha Doongarwal is a mixed media artist. Her conceptually layered pieces combine painting, photography, fabric, and digital prints which explore varying relationships between past and popular culture, by referencing social issues such as racism, immigration, and gender inequality.
Geraldine Leahy – Q&A
We are delighted to introduce the work of artist Geraldine Leahy whose practice involves observations of traces and imprints in the coastal landscape resulting from natural and human activity. As she walks the coastline, Leahy explores impermanence and mutability by investigating the residual marks left in the environment following severe weather events. Her paintings seek out the unexpected in the landscape – incongruous objects and situations that are the result of natural processes and human actions
Paul Butler – Q&A
Initially inspired by the work of Terry Frost and Ben Nicholson, Paul Butler has found himself intrigued by the possibility of using simple shapes, colour and texture to create art. Butler travels widely and has enjoyed working with artists in New Zealand and Australia. He enjoys experimenting with materials and is obsessed with the circle in all its forms.
Zoe E Adams
Zoe E Adams is an artist late to emerge in the autumn of her life. Using her spare time to learn about art, with lessons, reading and practising, Adams is now ready to share her work. Adams describes her style as; semi-abstract, impressionist.
Kellie North – Q&A
Kellie North is an award-winning photographer and visual artist with a deep desire to connect to nature, to her audience, and to herself. North plays with texture, light, movement, and nature, to create evocative, figurative images, which are connected to the subconscious and are deeply engaging.
Patrice Sullivan – Q&A
Patrice Sullivan’s work is about memory and family. Although Sullivan works from photographs, the paintings are not photorealism. The paint itself, with its restive and gestural surfaces, embodies the memory with which she sees the past. And the past is her family, is sibling rivalry, marital conflicts, divorce and adversity, and their effects.
Jenna Cable – Q&A
We are delighted to introduce the work of street photographer Jenna Cable who is an observer and a collector of simple moments. Cable first became really consumed with taking photos when she moved to New Orleans and didn't know a soul there. Her bike and camera...
LUAP – Q&A
A skilled fine artist who dynamically fuses painting and photography, Paul Robinson aka LUAP, born in Grimsby in 1982, is fast gaining critical recognition and a celebrity following for his exciting work.
Piers Secunda – Q&A
Piers Secunda was born in London in 1976 and studied painting at Chelsea College of Art in London. Since the late nineties Piers has developed a studio practice using paint in a sculptural manner, rejecting the limitations imposed by the canvas.
Kevin Devonport – Q&A
Using oils or acrylic, Kevin Devonport likes to paint traditional genres in a degree of realism however all the images have a contemporary essence. Devonport is a self-taught painter therefore he does not hold any artistic qualifications although he does hold a First Class honours BSc in Sociology that does have an influence on his work. Popular themes Devonport explores are consumerism and people’s attachments to materiality alongside perceptions of ‘the self and identity.
Sára Várady – Q&A
We are delighted to introduce the work of Sára Várady an artist from Hungary who travelled to London in the middle of the pandemic to chase her dream of being an artist. Várady is currently studying at the Royal College of Art. I am gazing at my reflection in the...
Adedeji Akinkunmi
Adedeji Akinkunmi is a digital artist, born and bred in Nigeria, where he lived all his life before moving to the Uk to gain his masters degree. Adedeji fell in love with creating digital arts while he was still trying to gain his first degree in computer science at Ajayi Crowther university in Nigeria. he quickly joined a group of young digital artist to learn the techniques of the art. Soon after, he became fascinated with surrealism and the ability to create an out of the world imagination through digital means. His works are sometimes inspired by dreams.

















