Carey Mortimer

Forest I - wax and egg tempera on canvas - 45cm x 45cm

Elemental I - egg tempera on gessoed canvas - 49cm x 42cm

Elemental II - egg tempera on gessoed canvas - 49cm x 42cm

Within or Without - fresco mounted on alveolam panel - 58cm x 57cm

The Dance IV - buon fresco on alveolam panel - 85cm x 119cm

The Human Element II - fresco mounted on alveolam panel - 50cm x 50cm

The Dance III - wax, egg tempera, gold leaf on canvas - 90cm x 90cm

Book of Bowls - egg tempera on Delabole slate - 39cm x 61cm

Two Bowls - botanical ink on paper - 35cm x 50cm

Alchemy - egg tempera on gessoed canvas - 31cm x 31cm

Bequest - egg tempera on antique chestnut door panel - 94cm x 84cm

Megan's Mountain - egg tempera on gessoed cloth - 20 x 24cm

Neronian Woman - buon fresco and oil mounted on alveolam panel - 66cm x 40cm

Carey Mortimer is a fresco painter utilising tempera among other traditional painting techniques. Discovering fresco set Carey Mortimer on her path as an artist. After graduating from City and Guilds of London Art School in 1986, she studied under Italian restorer Leonetto Tintori, who introduced her to the medium of the ancients and encouraged her to unravel it.
Lime, sand, pigment, yolk . . . how to make new the alchemies of the past? Carey likes to unzip the science: fresco is painting turned to stone, egg tempera is hardening strings of protein, gold is stable and stays gold forever. First know the rules to break them. And if nature is already divine, why compete? Freed from its ordinary context, a gathered leaf / mermaid’s purse / bowl or feather can take on a different function altogether: ‘A painting is only a rearrangement of matter into another form.’ The artist as chemist of the imagination. The studio as crucible, microscope, chantry.
Past and present speak in their own ways. Alert to the languages of both, Carey blends age-old techniques and her own contemporary sensibility to create surprising visual poems. Her paintings acknowledge the difficult noise of our time, but by reminding us to see beauty they offer a healing perspective, and in doing so help restore balance.
Her work can be found in many public, private and corporate collections worldwide, including Aviva Headquarters, London; Farleigh Hungerford Castle; Firmdale Hotels, London; and Jones Day, London and New York.
The Thackeray Gallery has represented Carey Mortimer since 1994.
You can see more of Carey’s work on her webpage: https://careymortimer.co.uk/