Try GOLD - Free
Changing views
Country Life UK
|November 11, 2020
Environmental art is all the rage, but, for landscape painters, it was never out of fashion. Laura Gascoigne finds out why
UNDER threat of climate change, contemporary artists are rediscovering Nature. Yet as meltingice sculptures grab the headlines, artists working in an older medium—paint —have gone on quietly responding to the landscapes that inspired Gainsborough, Constable, Turner and Cotman.
Not all of these artists meant to follow a traditional path. At Trent Polytechnic in the 1970s, David Tress had no intention of becoming a painter; he was far more interested in experimental media. However, on summer holidays in Wales, the Pembrokeshire landscape got under his skin. ‘At the end of the three years, I wasn’t convinced by what I’d been doing and had the scandalous thought: “I think I want to be a painter… possibly a landscape painter.”’ Since moving to Pembrokeshire 45 years ago, he has painted all over Britain (the landscapes in his new exhibition at Messum’s London range from Scottish lochs to prehistoric sites in Wiltshire), but the places that inspire him ‘are often places I know well: ordinary slabs of landscape where, just by chance, you happen to be when something happens—an event of light —that transforms something that 10 minutes later would be nothing particular’.
The New Year and a Lit Cloud, 2020 (Fig 6), records such an event in a spot Mr Tress passes all the time outside his local town of Haverfordwest. Although he carries a sketchbook to make outline drawings, the real action takes place in the studio. ‘When you’re sitting in front of something, you’re almost totally absorbed in putting down what’s there; in the studio, gut feeling, memory and imagination are poured into the painting.’

This story is from the November 11, 2020 edition of Country Life UK.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Country Life UK
Country Life UK
A lapwing and a prayer
St Valentine's month may be bitterly cold, but the capricious charms of Vanellus vanellus never fail to warm the heart, says John Lewis-Stempel
4 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
Put your trust in me
I found out last week that you don't always need to give something up for Lent: you can also take something on.
1 min
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
Vote for the countryside
COUNTRY people in much of England will now have a chance to vote in May.
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
In her write mind
Sibyls, the book born of Ruth Fainlight's poems and Leonard Baskin's prints, became a memento of friendship, beauty and sorrow for its author
4 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
Kitchen garden cook- Cauliflower
Cauliflower-cheese crumpets with smoked salmon
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
An eye to the future
What changes to a house do most to enhance its aesthetics, function, comfort, sustainability and longevity? On March 24, leading experts in architecture, interior design, craft and restoration will share the secrets to maximising possibilities and protecting value at Daylesford's magnificent Heritage House in Gloucestershire
1 min
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
Brown study
Beloved of everyone from prime ministers to Sir John Betjeman, brown sauce-arguably Britain's favourite piquant condiment-has a wonderfully rich history, writes Harry Pearson
3 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
Northern beauties
Before the country-house market begins in earnest-which is later in the northern regions-three handsome houses are launched in the hope of catching the eye of eager would-be buyers
5 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
Dogs behaving badly
I CHEWED my granny's passport and now she is stuck in Canada.'
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Country Life UK
The land of saints and seals
In our new series exploring the best places to visit in the UK, Mark Hedges journeys to Cornwall's wild and ancient coastline
3 mins
February 25, 2026
Translate
Change font size
