Wendy Horner works from her garden studio in Portmellon, Mevagissey.

Her work has been widely exhibited in Cornwall.

Richard Horner is a painter of marine scenes who lives near Helston.

John Horsewell was born in London. Both his father and grandfather were professional painters. He worked for several years in interior design but began to focus fully on his art from 1978. His paintings are held by collections in the UK, USA and Japan. He has a cottage in St Ives.

Eethel Horsfall was born in Lancaster. It was as an art student in Paris that she met her husband, Edward ERTZ, at that time Professor of Watercolour at the Delecluse Academy. After their marriage the couple moved to Polperro, where they set up their first painting school.

Polperro was the birthplace of their two children. Both husband and wife exhibited from there and at the RA. 

By 1905 the family had moved to Devon, where they set up a painting school in Yealmpton, and later one near Kingsbridge. This was followed by a move to Pulborough in Sussex. On her premature death from a stroke in 1919, she was described as 'a watercolour painter of rare technical ability and poetic feeling and was best known by her vibrating moonlight pictures at the Royal Academy'.

 

 

Sam Horton is an artist and illustrator living in Cornwall.

Sandy Horton is an artist based in Looe, who combines glass and timber to create sculptures.

Alex Horton-Howe is a practising architect based in west Looe, who paints abstract landscapes and seascapes.

Jenni Hosen grew up in Hayle, but has lived and worked in Truro for many years.

Miss Hoskin was one of the first needleworkers to work with CRYSEDE, making up the silks into dresses from designs by Kay Earle.  This work was exhibited also.

After launching her career as a wildlife illustrator in London, Amanda Hoskin returned to Cornwall in the early 1990s.

Her landscapes are regularly exhibited at Gallery Tresco, and at Tregony Gallery and the Harbour Gallery on the Roseland peninsula. Further afield, her work has been shown at art fairs in Cheltenham and London.

She is a tutor at Newlyn School of Art (2016). Amanda has led workshops in oil painting at Truro Arts Company (2018).

 

Catherine Hoskin gained a BA (Hons) in Studio Ceramics in 2001 from Falmouth College of Art. More recently she has extended her artistic skills to include drawing and painting abstracts inspired by the landscape of Cornwall.

David Hosking was born in Cornwall and has lived in Porthleven for over thirty years. He was a student at Falmouth School of Art, completing his art education at West Midlands College. He taught in Plymouth and then Helston. After taking early retirement from his teaching career in 1995, he was able to focus on his painting. In his work he creates 'strong emotive compositions with strong shapes and rich colours'.

Hosking's paintings have been exhibited at Falmouth Arts Centre and the Picture House Gallery, St Ives.

Carol Hosking-Smith has been based in St Ives since 2003. After studying at Reigate, Croydon and Chelsea Schools of Art, she completed postgraduate studies at Central School of Art and St Martins. She has worked as a textile designer, freelance painter, illustrator and designer, producing commissions in the UK, USA and Europe, including four large collages for the Frankfurt Design Fair in 2001.

Carol's abstract paintings on canvas and paper are motivated by colour. Working intuitively, she creates lyrical improvised works inspired by music and the energy and light of Cornwall. She has been a regular exhibitor in St Ives, notably at Penwith Gallery, Mariners Gallery, and Gallery on the Square; also at Vitreous Gallery, Truro and Open Space Gallery in Penryn.

A student, she was mentioned in Whybrow's 1921-39 list of artists in and around St Ives.

After completing a foundation course at Mid Cheshire College of Art (1984-1985) Liz Hough obtained a degree in Fine Art at Manchester Polytechnic. This was followed by a post-graduate degree in Painting at the Royal Academy Schools from 1988-1991. From 1997 to 1998 she studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Perugia, Italy.

She has exhibited extensively since 1989 and received the Daler-Rowney Award in the 1990 Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, the Creswick Prize for Landscape Painting in Oils and the Landseer Scholarship Prize for Compositional Studies in Oils. Her work is included in extensive public and private collections worldwide including TSB, Paintings in Hospitals and Bank of China. She is represented by Oliver Contemporary in Wandsworth Common, London.

Currently she lives and works in St Ives. She is a regular exhibitor at STISA open shows.

 Mark and his wife Bev HOULDING have lived in Cornwall since 1996. During the 1980s they made room screens, experimenting with many different materials including glass, metal and sail cloth. From this they developed a method of working using carved and painted wood, exhibiting in the UK and abroad and creating pieces for private and corporate clients. In recent years they have concentrated on painting.

Bev and her husband Mark HOULDING have lived in Cornwall since 1996. During the 1980s they made room screens, experimenting with many different materials including glass, metal and sail cloth. From this they developed a method of working using carved and painted wood, exhibiting in the UK and abroad and creating pieces for private and corporate clients. In recent years they have concentrated on painting.

Hounsome works from Studio 6, Trewidden Studios at Trewidden Gardens, Buryas Bridge west of Penzance. See  www.georginahounsome.blogspot.com for further details.

Since graduating from Bath Spa University College with a BA (first class) in Illustration, Georgina then went on to complete an MA in Illustration at University College Falmouth.  She has since been working as an independent illustrator and a teacher of printmaking.  Her work includes, drawing, collage, painting and printing.  Her illustration has been commissioned by clients including Orange, The Guardian, Waitrose, The Independent and House and Garden Magazine.

Georgina Hounsome is a tutor at Newlyn School of Art (2016).

After 25 years living in London, Miranda Housden moved to Cornwall in 2016. She lives and works on the Tamar Estuary at Torpoint.

Formerly the London Director for the Royal Institute of British Architects, she is currently the South West Director for the Institution of Civil Engineers, and co-founder of the South West Infrastructure Partnership. She has curated several cross-disciplinary exhibitions with artists, architects and engineers.

During the 1980s, Miranda studied Fine Art at Falmouth School of Art. Subsequently she was selected for her first solo show at the Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol by curator Frances Morris CBE. She went on to study for an MA in Fine Art at Chelsea School of Art, where she was awarded a Rome Scholarship at the British School at Rome. This was followed by a year living in the Czech Republic, where the British Council funded a solo exhibition of her work in Prague.

Her most recent solo exhibition, Players, took place in the Old Morgue, Plymouth in 2023.

She continues to exhibit widely, not only in the UK but internationally.

Howard is a Chilean oil painter, drawn to figurative and narrative subjects.

Keith Howard moved to Cornwall in the early 2000s. He lives and works in St Ives. He has exhibited not only in the UK but also in Germany and Holland.

Jane Howard was born in Sheffield and moved to Bedfordshire in her late teens, where she studied graphic design. After working in the design industry for a number of years, she moved to Cornwall in 2002. Using rusted steel and aluminium, she creates portraits and landscapes which explore life at particular points in history.

John Howard is a tutor at Newlyn School of Art (2016).

Ken Howard was born in London but later moved to Cornwall, settling near Mousehole, where his studio was in an old school. This was the start of a long association with Cornwall. He was selected to represent his work in A Century of Art in Cornwall 1889-1989 held at NAG (put on by Newlyn Orion & Cornwall County Council), comprising 140 art works executed in Cornwall within that period. (A coloured photo of Howard appears facing p129, in Hardie 1995).

Strangely, there is no mention in Buckman (2006) about Howard's life in Cornwall in the otherwise excellent summary of his professional life and the numerous awards, scholarships and commissions that he received. Howard was a Vice-President of the Penlee House Museum, and a Patron of the Penzance School of Art. He was also Professor of Perspective at London's Royal College of Art.

James Howe is a film-maker and painter living in west Looe.

Terry Howe works from a studio in Millbrook, east Cornwall. His sculptures are created from recycled materials.

During the 1970s Terry was a student at Lowestoft College of Art. He then embarked on a career in London as a designer. From 1991 to 1996 he was a founder and director of Up the Hill Gallery in Brighton, set up to participate in the Brighton Festival. His work has been widely exhibited in the UK.

He moved to Cornwall in 2019.

Julie Howe lives and works in Penryn. Besides working in oils and acrylics, she also creates papier-mache pieces.

She is a regular exhibitor at STISA open shows.

Sian Howells was born and brought up in Padstow but left home at 18 to pursue a career in the Royal Navy. After 13 years as an engineering officer she returned to Padstow and recently took up painting.

Karen Howse is a printmaker living in Launceston.

Hoyland was born in Sheffield. In Cornwall he exhibited on three separate occasions at the Lemon Street Gallery in Truro (since 2006). 

Tate St Ives mounted a retrospective exhibition "John Hoyland: The Trajectory of a Fallen Angel" (2006), curated by Paul Moorhouse.

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