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BETH WINTERBURN | Ink, Acrylic, Oil Stick, Latex | 76x76 cm • 30x30 in

Summer Storm Collection No. 7


Painting No. 7 from the Storm Collection by Beth Winterburn

A collection recalling summers spent in western North Carolina, in a small community 20 miles east of Asheville; a home-away-from-home. Days filled with wrap-around porches, crisp, refreshing mountain air, the sticky sweetness of blooming rhododendron flowers, the soothing backdrop of meandering streams, and the pleasant shock of icy cold water on your feet. Most notably, the soothing scents and sounds of storms making their way across the mountains and through the evergreen forests - an experience intricately woven into the fabric of personhood. A collection of nostalgia - recalling a time and a place of memory - of a slow pace, of being present to the sights, sounds and memories of summer.

Materials: Ink, Acrylic, Oil Stick, Latex, on Raw Canvas
Size: 30 x 30 in | 76 x 76 cm 
Year: 2025

Sale price$1,610.00
Summer Storm Collection No. 7
Summer Storm Collection No. 7 Sale price$1,610.00

Artist’s Vision

BETH WINTERBURN

Beth’s work is defined by bold, gestural brushstrokes and a minimalist approach, creating compositions that are both dynamic and deliberate. Rooted in her analytical background in photography and architecture, she infuses each piece with a calculated structure—balancing light and dark, counting evens and odds, and visually dividing the canvas into thirds and fifths. These principles ground her work in a sense of order, while her intuitive use of colour, shape, line, and texture evokes the fluidity and complexity of human experience.

Her art explores interpersonal dynamics, with each stroke representing a memory, a moment, or an emotion. Beth’s paintings become a personal journal of both the past and the future—capturing the highs and lows of her journey, and the tension between longing and acceptance, conflict and serenity. Through her work, she tells a story of human relationships, translated through a visual language that communicates the depth of connection and disconnection.

Driven by a desire for transparency and vulnerability, Beth often leaves marks and paint strokes exposed, allowing them to speak for themselves. She sees these raw moments as integral to the emotional truth of the piece, reflecting the complexities and evolving nature of relationships. Line and colour serve as bridges, bringing cohesion and connectivity to seemingly unrelated gestures, while the process itself remains a central focus of her creative practice. For Beth, the journey is more significant than the final product—the collected moments, like relationships, unfold over time and carry the weight of personal transformation.