Artists at Eyot
Browse the work of ten professional artists in a large airy hall on the banks of the Thames.
This year we have a wide range of exciting work on offer, including two exciting jewellers, a photographer, a botanical artist, landscapes created in textiles, riverside scenes in print and paint, hand made artists books and plenty more to tempt you!
Opening Times
2nd - 4th May 10am - 5pm
Number of exhibitors
10
Parking
Large car park attached to the venue










Meet the Exhibitors
Looking forward to meeting you to share insights into the inspiration and techniques that make the work so unique.





Shelagh Casebourne
I paint in oils, often working en plein air or directly from life to capture landscapes and interior spaces. At the heart of my practice is a fascination with light and the fleeting moments it creates. Whether I’m painting the natural world or the quiet corner of a room, it is always the quality of light that draws me in.





Sheila Sather
Sheila Sather is an environmental artist living and working in Buckinghamshire, England.
Sheila's work is inspired by the idea that we live in a visual world, and that few of us know how to read it. When bombarded with constant visual noise, we often disregard nature. Her work is designed to encourage focus and mindfulness of nature.





Robin Dodd
I am a landscape photographer based near Henley-on-Thames, working primarily in the local woodlands and landscape. My work explores atmosphere and the quite misty light of our river valley and its woodlands. I exhibit framed prints where trees, mist, and land come together, creating images that invite the viewer to slow down, pause, and reconnect with the natural world locally





Marianne McCaughey
I create jewellery celebrating natural textures and understated beauty. Inspired by desert landscapes, ancient patterns, and organic forms. Gemstones and refined metals are brought together through hand-forging, casting, metal fusing, and subtle patination to create irregular, tactile surfaces. Each piece carries a sense of timelessness and historical connection, resulting in wearable, sculptural jewellery that bridges past and present.





Kate Findlay
Kate is inspired by nature and the British countryside. She works solely in textiles, creating detailed and many layered pieces collaged from hand dyed and printed fabrics. Stitch is added, usually by machine to create further detail and texture.





Janina Maher
I am inspired to paint the buildings around me using pen and wash. These pictures are available as original paintings, prints and greetings cards and I also produce a calendar annually. My other main interest is creating handmade journals and sketchbooks from scratch and I enjoy exploring different books structures as well as different materials including paper, fabric and leather.





Janet Roberts
My watercolours have an almost, photo-realistic style, depicting everything from flowers to landscapes and still life. My second medium is silk painting which are original ‘one off’ works of art on silk in the form of scarves, gallery wrapped paintings or silk backed plates.
I love working with vibrant Alcohol Inks on paintings, jewellery, lamps and up-cycled ceramic items; the colours move and blend as though they have a life of their own. I use Silk Dyes, a similar medium, on one of a kind silk scarves which are then steamed to set the beautiful colours.





Clare Buchta
I am a land and seascape artist working in all media especially oil , collage and printmaking. My inspirations are the local waterways and countryside and the uk coastline. I work from sketches in watercolour and ink created when I am out in the countryside and at the coast to create my final pieces in my home studio





Andrew Field
As a canoeist on the Thames, I am privileged to see kingfishers and other amazing wildlife. Once on the water and paddling away, you enter a natural realm, becoming immersed and seeing everything from a different, lower perspective. I find the wet-on-wet technique of watercolour, old maps and gold leaf, combine to capture that flash of the kingfisher.





Alexandra von Widdern
Coming of age in 90s Berlin, Alexandra’s designs are driven by a fascination with the raw marks of history on the built environment and their power to trigger memories.
She often combines a materiality-led approach with traditional design, wax carving and goldsmithing techniques to juxtapose precious 18 carat recycled gold with eroded textures and monochrome shades of diamonds.