Sax Impey ‘Landfalls’

Sax Impey ‘Landfalls’

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Artist : Sax Impey
Title : Landfalls
Medium : mixed media on paper
Dimensions : 30 x 60 cm


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Sax Impey’s artworks are often large scale, immersive and elemental, incorporating intense detail and dexterity and an expressive, behavioural use of medium. Since 2005, Impey has produced works derived predominantly from experiences at sea. A qualified RYA Yachtmaster he has sailed many thousands of miles around the world. His journeys have had a profound impact and subsequent development as an artist. Reconnecting with nature through this powerful element has the almost inescapable effect of calling to question many of life’s existential questions. This epiphanic moment of realisation, of revelation, is at the core of Impey’s oeuvre. Reflecting on and capturing personal moments and making them universal, Impey’s work reaffirms the importance of introspection and confrontation, found specifically when surrounded by the natural world; “A mind can breathe, and observe, and reflect, away from the shrill desperation of a culture that, having forgotten that it is better to say nothing than something about nothing, invents ever new ways to fill every single space with less and less”.

Impey was born in Penzance, Cornwall. He currently works from one of the prestigious Porthmeor Studios in St. Ives. From 2005, he has collaborated with the cross-cultural, environmental art group Red Earth. In 2007 Impey’s work was selected for the ‘Art Now Cornwall’ exhibition at Tate St Ives where he was placed on the cover of the associated publication. The same year he was heralded in The Times as one of the ‘New Faces of Cornish Art’. In 2010 he was featured in Owen Sheers’s BBC4 Documentary ‘Art of the Sea (In Pictures)’ alongside Anish Kapoor, J. M. W. Turner, Martin Parr and Maggi Hambling among others. His work was selected as a finalist the 2013 Threadneedle Prize and the year before was elected an Academician at the Royal West of England Academy. His paintings are in multiple collections including The Arts Council, Warwick University and the Connaught Hotel.

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