A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!

Plants give us great joy and decorate our houses in many ways. But what do we know about them? Where were they “born”, where did they originate from? What is the situation in their natural habitats? They are usually the weakest living thing in our households as they cannot raise their voices and demand our attention, our love or our feeding.
During our event, we would like to collect your stories that you can tell about your plants in ways that give them a past, a present and a future. Bring a potted plant from your home that you would like to talk about. This can be a dear or less-loved plant. But a plant that you have something to say about.
Bring the plant out of the hidden spaces of your home and show its beauty in a different environment where it can be collectively appreciated. The stories that you can share about your particular plant will be collected.
If you would be interested in presenting your plant please email plantstories@lux.org.uk or just drop in on the day.
Plant Stories is devised by Sonya Schönberger, the current Goethe@LUX artist in residence who is exploring plant ecologies as part of a project inspired by the work of the poet Andrew Marvell who lived in Waterlow Park.
Join us for walking tour of Jewish Highgate and learn about:
• the first house owned by Jews after the re-entry
• the 5 synagogues
• the second oldest Jewish school
• a famous Jewish architect and his Jewish client
• what Daniel Defoe said about the Jews of Highgate
• the connection with Coleridge and Voltaire
• famous residents – including George Michael and Karl Marx
• the Highgate man who saved 3,500 people from the holocaust
The tour lasts 90mins , starting at Cromwell House and end with an optional visit to Highgate Synagogue, courtesy of Rabbi Liss.
20 places, ticket sales going towards the festival.
Use this link for tickets on the 23/6/19
Local young musicians from Highgate School perform live on the Tea Lawn in Waterlow Park from 2.30pm to 4.30pm on Sunday 16 June.
A lovely, relaxing afternoon of summer sunshine, picnics and free live music performed by local school children as part of this year’s Sundial Sundays season. Plus, the Highgate School Bands performance will coincide with this year’s Highgate Festival!
Insieme Chamber Ensemble present Mozart’s delightful comic chamber opera, Bastien and Bastienne, outside on the beautiful Tea Lawn as part of part of this year’s Highgate Festival
Bastien and Bastienne was written by Mozart when he was only 12, purportedly for a performance in the Garden Theatre of the famous ‘Magnetist’ Dr Mesmer. It’s a simple and delightful tale about the trials of Bastien and his shepherdess love Bastienne, with additional mesmeric magic from the Wizard Colas plus plenty of other mischief. Waterlow Park’s Tea Lawn, where a Shepherd and Shepherdess are already in residence as statues, is the ideal setting for this lovely pastoral piece.
Come along for a charming summer evening’s entertainment on the Tea Lawn outside Lauderdale House, performed by our resident Chamber Opera Ensemble, Insieme.
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!
Free entry to east cemetery for residents of N6, N19, NW5
Wear sturdy shoes
Chester Road entrance also open
Children must be accompanied by an adult
Bring proof of address as this must be shown
Booking not required
As part of this year’s Highgate Festival, Blacktooth Productions present Highgate Histories at Lauderdale House on 19 June.
Blacktooth specialise in literary readings washed down with rollicking anecdotes and live music. For one night only they present an offbeat celebration of an area known for its vivid history and illustrious residents. The programme includes pieces by Dickens, Marvell, Coleridge and Christina Rossetti, along with tales of Highgate’s Great and Good (and not so good) and episodes from the area’s occasionally murky past – some of them with a direct bearing on Lauderdale House.
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!

We are delighted to present the UK Premiere of BL CK B X artist Morgan Quaintance’s latest work Batakhalou Dakar (Letter from Dakar). The screening will be followed by a discussion between the artist and curator Amanprit Sandhu.
Batakhalou Dakar (Letter from Dakar) (2019)
A documentary film focusing on arts, culture and politics in Dakar, Senegal.
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!
A narration of poet Siegfried Sassoon’s life adapted by Maureen Lyle from autobiographical writings and poems.
Following Sassoon’s life from pre-war country gentleman to wartime hero the narration will be accompanied by music, English song and popular ballads. This remarkable journey includes many twists of fate and personal challenges leading to Sassoon’s unique poetry depicting life in the trenches and his ultimate discharge as an army officer, a hundred years ago in 1919.
The show will take place in the Long Gallery at Lauderdale House.
Refreshments are available from 6:30 pm and during the interval.
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!
Come along for a day of local, ethical and sustainable shopping at Extraordinary Artisans Market at Lauderdale House. The next market is on Sunday 23 June.
Discover locally made arts & crafts, gifts, vintage, homewares and clothing and more at a beautiful artisan market where where everything you buy comes from ‘a good place’.
Extraordinary Artisans Market takes place on Sunday 23 June from 11am to 5pm. Entry is free.
A ten-day celebration of Highgate, covering the arts, ecology, music, film, its heritage and its future.
Highgate Festival 14th June to 23rd June: Save the dates and see www.highgatefestival.org for all the events and click on each date separately.
Events all round Highgate; times and venues on the website!
Join us for walking tour of Jewish Highgate and learn about:
• the first house owned by Jews after the re-entry
• the 5 synagogues
• the second oldest Jewish school
• a famous Jewish architect and his Jewish client
• what Daniel Defoe said about the Jews of Highgate
• the connection with Coleridge and Voltaire
• famous residents – including George Michael and Karl Marx
• the Highgate man who saved 3,500 people from the holocaust
The tour lasts 90mins , starting at Cromwell House and end with an optional visit to Highgate Synagogue, courtesy of Rabbi Liss.
20 places, ticket sales going towards the festival.
Use this link for tickets on the 23/6/19

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays.

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays.

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays.

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays.
Image: Islands, Iona – oil on canvas. ÓLiz Sutherland 2018. All rights reserved
Cityscapes and Landscapes is an exhibition of iPad drawings by Liz Sutherland who will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm.
Liz’s latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays

Liz Sutherland
Cityscapes and Landscapes, 28 June – 11 July, is an exhibition of colourful, expressive paintings, dynamic sketches and fluid iPad drawings by north London artist Liz Sutherland. Her latest body of work has been inspired by three strikingly different locations: the dramatic seascapes of Scotland and Sweden, and the intense urban cityscapes of London.
In her Scottish scenes she conjures up the beauty and remoteness of the west coast island of Iona, giving the paintings a sense of the freedom of the landscape through the use of expressive brush strokes and a vibrant palette. The sea is a recurring element in Sutherland’s work and a visit to Sandhammeren beach in southern Sweden has also captured her imagination. Again, it was the particular quality of the colour and light which she found arresting and in these paintings she seeks to capture the sun’s fleeting brilliance as it hit the coast line on a very cold day in December.
Closer to home are the more familiar scenes of Alexander Palace and iconic views of Waterloo Bridge. The contrast of the urban juxtaposed with the natural have remained favourite motifs. It is important for Liz to keep the paintings fresh and alive. She often works on several at the same time, using confident gestural marks. She tries out new techniques such as using a syringe or thick brushes attached to poles to apply her paint. “In this way I have less control and the results continue to surprise and excite me,” she explains.
Liz draws using charcoal and pastels on paper, as well as employing photographs to aid her “re-imagining” when back in her North London studio. But it is her interest in the use of the iPad that has had the most significant impact on her working methods. This is particularly noticeable in her London oil paintings. For Liz, the iPad has become the ‘modern sketchbook’, its particular qualities of line and shape influencing the subsequent transformation into paint. She is attempting to create a kind of shorthand abstract language in paint, which never quite abandons the subject matter. “Usually the ones that come out quickly work the best. The freedom of paint is what I’m trying to produce.” (Ham and High, 2016).
Highgate Gallery is delighted to announce that Liz will be holding a free demonstration on iPad drawing on Sunday 7th July from 2-3pm. Participants should bring their own iPad with the Brushes XP application downloaded if possible. All levels welcome.
Liz comes from family of artists. Her grandparents were renowned Scottish painters D.M. Sutherland (RSA) and Dorothy Johnstone (ARSA). She studied History of Art at UCL and then went on to do a painting postgraduate course at Central St Martin’s. She has had solo shows in London, Oxford and Ely and exhibits regularly in Open Studios with Collage Arts (previously in the Chocolate Factory). She trained to be a teacher in 2009 and regularly teaches art to Primary Schools children and to disabled adults. This is Liz’s second solo show at Highgate Gallery.
Highgate Gallery open Tuesday-Friday 1-5pm, Saturday 11am-4pm, Sunday 11am-5pm; closed Mondays