Seren Oakley
Tirweddau Dychmugol-Faesiol
Preview: Tuesday 21st October | 5:30 - 8:30pm
-
Wednesday 22nd October 12-8pm
Thursday 23rd October 10am-2pm
Friday 24th October 10am-2pm
Saturday 25th October 10am-2pm
Sunday 26th October 10am-2pm
Monday 27th October 10am-2pm
Saturday 1st November 10am-2pm
Sunday 2nd November 10am-2pm
Monday 3rd November 10am-2pm
Tuesday 4th November 10am-2pm
Wednesday 5th November 12-8pm
Thursday 6th November 10am-2pm
Friday 7th November 10am-2pm
Saturday 8th November 10am-2pm
Monday 10th November 10am-2pm
Tuesday 11th November 10am -2pm
Wednesday 12th November By Appointment
Thursday 13th November By Appointment
Friday 14th November 10am-2pm
Saturday 15th November 10am-2pm
Sunday 16th November 10am-2pm
Monday 17th November 10am-2pmTuesday 18th November By Appointment
Wednesday 19th November By Appointment
Thursday 20th November By Appointment
Friday 21st November By Appointment
Saturday 22nd November By Appointment
Sunday 23rd November By AppointmentMonday 24th November 10am-2pm
Tuesday 25th November 10am-2pm
Wednesday 26th November 12-8pm
Thursday 27th November 10am-2pm
Friday 28th November 10am-2pm
Saturday 29th November 10am-2pm
Sunday 30th November 10am-2pm ( exhibition open)
Sunday 30th November 12-2pm Lunchtime Conversation (Ticketed -limited to 10 tickets) -
Seren Oakley is an artist and designer from Cymru(Wales), currently living and working in the North of England. Seren’s practice is multidisciplinary and currently follows creative research projects as they unfold.
-
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pulpquality/
Seren Oakley is a Leeds based Artist and studio holder at Serf Studios.
This exhibition is a research based creative expansion on a previous exhibition titled ‘And in this Dream’ that happened at Serf in 2024. Tirweddau Dychmugol-Faesiol (Imaginary Field-Landscapes) is a continuation of that project further exploring indigenous dream culture and personal dream structure. Tirweddau Dychmugol-Faesiol is a body of work based on ‘imaginal realm’ dreaming, personal dream cartography, threshold dreaming, psychopomps and Welsh dream heritage. A large part of the work finds inspiration in The Welsh Chwedlau and Mabinogi, with imagery and symbolism carrying through in some of the works, occasionally alongside the personal dream cartography and symbolism of the artist. In this exhibition you will experience a mix of digital and analogue processes.