This story is sponsored by Lucy Pittaway.
Lucy Pittaway, the celebrated British artist renowned for her vivid and colourful paintings, has launched a new collection at her gallery in Harrogate which is celebrating its first birthday this weekend.
In the spirit of appreciation, the Harrogate gallery has planned a weekend of entertainment and fun starting tomorrow.
The gallery will have a lucky dip for those who purchase art or merchandise including the chance to win a special 25% off voucher. There will a gallery trail quiz to keep the little ones entertained as well as new art and merchandise in the store in time for Christmas.
The most exciting of the new releases in the gallery will be the new “Little Lucy” collection.
All six of the original “Little Lucy” pieces have just gone on display at the gallery on Prospect Place in the town centre.
This captivating collection takes us on an enchanting journey through the complexities of childhood experiences, illuminating their enduring impact on our lives. With a rich tapestry of emotions and narratives, “Little Lucy” promises to captivate hearts and minds alike.
The “Little Lucy” collection draws its inspiration from the profound notion that our early life experiences, both joyful and challenging, intricately shape the individuals we become. At the core of this collection lies the compelling narrative of a young girl named “Little Lucy,” who navigates the uncertainties and anxieties of her youth with a heart full of compassion and boundless creativity.
In the enchanting world of “Little Lucy,” we meet a character who embodies the innocence of youth yet grapples with a lack of confidence. Her vivid imagination and compassionate nature serve as her guiding stars, offering a glimmer of hope amidst the backdrop of overthinking, school worries, and a constantly shifting home life. She is the girl who gazes out of her window, her mind a whirlwind of thoughts, earning her the affectionate nickname “Dolly Daydream” from her parents.
As Little Lucy grows, she adapts to the changes life throws her way and steadfastly endeavours to infuse positivity into her existence. Her story is a poignant reminder that our early experiences do not dictate our future; rather, we hold the power to script our own destinies.

Lucy Pittaway herself taking in the new collection.
At the heart of “The Little Lucy” Collection lies a profound message: “Sometimes life may not grant us the best start, for reasons beyond our control. However, these experiences do not define who we are or who we can become. Each experience is but a chapter in our book of life, and we possess the pen to write the subsequent chapters. Reach for the stars.”
Lucy Pittaway’s intention with this collection is to resonate deeply with individuals on their personal journeys, instilling the belief that they can surmount challenges and aspire to greatness.
Little Lucy represents resilience and a belief in brighter days
“Little Lucy” represents a departure from Lucy Pittaway’s earlier works in that it openly addresses mental health issues, particularly among young individuals. While her signature painting style remains consistent, the introduction of “Little Lucy” and her story adds a deeply personal and relatable dimension to her art. Elements familiar to her audience, such as the iconic round Swaledale sheep, continue to make appearances, forging a connection between this collection and Lucy’s established body of work.
The launch of “Little Lucy” comes at a poignant time, as the world grapples with unprecedented challenges. Widespread suffering has underscored the need for support and the dissemination of positivity. This collection seeks to provide solace and hope to young people contending with mental health issues, fostering resilience and nurturing the belief in brighter days ahead.
The creative journey behind “Little Lucy” commenced with Lucy Pittaway’s thoughts and emotions taking shape on paper. Ideas flowed freely, leading to sketches, studies, and ultimately, fully realised paintings. From an array of visual concepts, Lucy selected six pieces that authentically encapsulate the essence of this remarkable collection.
The six-piece collection is available as artists’ proofs, sketches for the very first time, originals, and prints.
Lucy Pittaway’s responsibility to wanting to make a positive impact goes beyond her art. A portion of the proceeds from the sales of the “Little Lucy” collection will be donated to a local charity, The Junction based in Teesside, is focused on supporting young people. By combining her artistic talent with a charitable spirit, Pittaway aims to provide tangible support to those in need.
Lucy’s aspiration for “Little Lucy” is to inspire positivity and a sense of accomplishment in those who have traversed arduous paths. She hopes viewers will perceive these paintings as more than just art; they are profound expressions of resilience and hope. If these vibrant creations can brighten even a single person’s life, then they have undeniably fulfilled their purpose.
For more information about Lucy Pittaway and the “Little Lucy” collection, please click or tap here or visit the Harrogate gallery today.
Artist completes mural on Harrogate’s Cold Bath RoadThe finishing touches were applied to a mural on Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road today.
Simon Colgan, owner of The Last Post pub, commissioned artist Richard Duffield to create a Harrogate-themed mural on the side of the building.
After seven days of work, a bright image of the town’s famous Royal Pump Room Museum now greets passers-by on the busy street.
Mr Duffield told the Stray Ferret it had been a difficult assignment because of the pebble-dash surface but he hoped people would like it.
It is the latest stage in the transformation of The Last Post since Mr Colgan took it over less than a year ago.
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Harrogate vegetarian café hosts art exhibitions to create ‘neighbourhood feel’
Harrogate vegetarian café, Delicious, is to host art exhibitions every month highlighting the talents of local artists.
The café, on Mayfield Grove, has only been open since June this year.
It’s owner, Olivier Roch, told the Stray Ferret that he wants it to become a hub for the local community -whether or not they are vegetarian.
“The purpose is to promote local artists. My place is on Mayfield Grove and we are seeking to be a neighbourhood café and be a place of soul. To offer something else other than food.”
Mr Roch grew up in France but has lived in Harrogate for the past 30 years and previously ran the Zinc bistro on John Street where he also used to promote local artists.
Seven artists are booked at Delicious, with a new display and opening on the last Friday of the month. The artist work is then hung on the café walls for the following four weeks. There is also a writing course on Tuesdays.
Mayfield Grove has been the scene of violent crime in recent years. Mr Roch says no area is immune from crime but believes the street is changing:
“Unfortunately crime is everywhere and I do not think Mayfield Grove is particularly different from anywhere else.
“I think the area is getting a little bit like Cold Bath Road.
“When I first came to Harrogate, my first bedsit was on Franklin road – now a lot of those beautiful houses have been transformed into single homes.
“It has turned around and now people want to live in the centre of town. There is a neighbourhood feel in the area and people are looking for that – a sense of community and we are trying to establish that.”
Olivier Roch outside his cafe and an example of the art displayed
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More than 100 of UK’s best artists to exhibit at Harrogate Art Fair
This story is sponsored by Harrogate Art Fair.
More than 100 artists from all over the UK will be converging on Harrogate next month to exhibit their best work at the Harrogate Art Fair.
The event, on October 13-15 at the Yorkshire Event Centre on the Great Yorkshire Showground, will bring together painters, printmakers, photographers, sculptors, ceramicists and selected galleries from all over the UK, offering the best in British contemporary art. Prices range from £50 to £5,000.

The perfect place to immerse yourself in a world of art.
One of the most popular exhibitors is Jos Haigh. Jos is a painter based in Harrogate and Buckinghamshire whose vibrantly colourful pictures of African animals made her one of the best-selling artists at the inaugural Harrogate Art Fair last year. She said:
“I’ve been showing my art all around the country for years – at Windsor, Surrey, Manchester and Edinburgh – and Harrogate Art Fair really is one of the best. It’s fantastically organised, everything’s made very easy for exhibitors, and it attracts a lot of the UK’s best artists.
“When I came last year, people were so warm, enthusiastic and interested – I didn’t have to think twice about coming again.”
Although she was born in Goa, Jos’s art is inspired and informed by her childhood in Kenya. But her trips north have provided her with new sources of inspiration. So her most recent paintings include striking images of cows, owls and other British animals.

Jos has found inspiration for some of her latest works here in Yorkshire.
Jos’s spectacular painting of a red kite even features on this year’s general admission ticket. She said:
“I’ve been enchanted by animals ever since I saw them roaming right next to the road in Kenya, which is why I’ve always enjoyed painting pictures of elephants, giraffes and zebra. But there are so many wonderful animals right here in the UK that it would be a shame not to paint some of them.
“I just hope that visitors to the Harrogate Art Fair will love viewing them as much as I’ve loved painting them.”
Harrogate Art Fair is organised by Contemporary Art Fairs. The company also hold art fairs in Windsor and Surrey.
The fair will be open from private viewings from 6 to 9pm on Friday, October 13 (tickets: £15), and from 10am to 5pm on Saturday and Sunday, October 14-15 (£8, concessions £6).
- Jos has have 10 complementary Harrogate Art Fair tickets to give away! She will send the code to the first 10 people to email her at joshaigh@yahoo.co.uk
Find out more:
You can book tickets for this event online at the Harrogate Art Fair website.
For information about exhibiting at the Harrogate Art Fair, visit the website or call 01753 591892.
You can also see more of the artworks on offer at Harrogate Art Fair on its Instagram page.
Harrogate woman with incurable cancer raises charity funds with crystal art
A Harrogate woman has been creating crystal art to raise funds for a local cancer charity after being diagnosed with the disease.
Paula Grainger, 79, discovered she had ovarian cancer in 2019. Since then she has been “giving something back” to Harrogate-based Yorkshire Cancer Research by selling her artwork at community events.
She said:
“I came across Yorkshire Cancer Research, and I didn’t realise that there was a regional cancer charity, so I thought ‘right, what can I do to help?’. I’ve always liked crafts, so I started producing some artwork to sell and donating the profits to the charity.”
Paula creates crystal art by placing crystals onto a canvas and sells it at events such as Bilton Cricket Club’s party of the pitch. She said:
“I’ve always made cards and other bits, but when I started doing crystal art, I just loved it. It’s really satisfying and once it’s finished it shimmers and shines.
“I live with my eldest daughter and her family, and I’ve almost taken over with all my craft supplies and artwork. They’ve given me half of the garage to store everything.”
Paula first visited her doctor after she noticed that she’d lost weight and was having trouble eating.
She was referred for further tests at St James’s Hospital in Leeds and was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Unfortunately, Paula was told that her cancer was incurable.

Paula Grainger
She said:
“I didn’t go to the doctors immediately when I started feeling unwell. I meet up with a group of friends once a week and they gave me a push to make the appointment to speak to my doctor. It was such a shock when the diagnosis came through.
“That’s something I’d want to get across to people, it feels daunting but it’s so important to go and speak to your doctor if you have anything you’re concerned about so you can catch the cancer early.”
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Paula had chemotherapy and after two years of monitoring, was given a second round in 2021. She now takes medication to prevent the cancer from spreading. She said:
“It’s been a difficult journey, especially when your mind is constantly thinking about the cancer, but I’m pleased with where I am now.”
Yorkshire Cancer Research funds research to tackle cancer in the region.
Mum-of-three Paula said:
12-foot horse sculpture to be installed at the Great Yorkshire Show“It was important to me to raise funds for a local charity. Yorkshire Cancer Research funds research in Leeds, where I was treated, so it felt like the perfect opportunity to help support the people who had supported me.
“I’m not doing it for people like me, I’m doing it for people like my daughters and my grandchildren, and everybody else who may be affected by cancer in the future and can benefit from developments in cancer research.
“When you think about the developments that have been made even in the past 10 years, it’s incredible. My mum and grandmother both passed away from cancer, and it was a very different prognosis then than it is now.”
A large horse sculpture has been delivered to the Great Yorkshire Showground.
The art work is made out of more than 600 welded horseshoes, collected from across Yorkshire.
The 750-kilogram piece is named ‘Os II’ after the Yorkshire slang word for horse and was craned into position outside the Yorkshire Event Centre today.
Its creator, Ollie Holman is a thirty-one-year-old artist from North Yorkshire, who has been welding since he was a teenager.
‘Os II’ will be displayed next to the Yorkshire Show’s art show from Tuesday, July 11 to Friday, July 14 along with some of Ollie’s other sculptures.
The sculptor cannot wait to see his work displayed at the event and said:
“I hope it stops people in their tracks and creates a big crowd around it. It will be nice to see people’s reactions,”
“The driving force behind this one was to improve myself as an artist and really capture the raw physical power of the horse in more detail. I layered up the horseshoes to give it that sense of power.
Ollie has made many horse sculptures, including another 12-foot piece which was sold to Cheltenham Race Course, but he is especially proud of his latest creation, which took five years to make.
Charles Mills, Director of the Great Yorkshire Show added:
“Ollie’s sculpture is a true epic that I have no doubt will turn heads at the Great Yorkshire Show.
“We are proud of the high-quality equestrian classes we have at the Show each year, so this is a very fitting sculpture to have in such a prominent position on the Showground.”
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Photo of the Week: Knaresborough Viaduct

Jake Sweeney
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
An artist whose gallery officially opened in Pateley Bridge last weekend has thanked local people for their support.
James Owen Thomas is known for his environmental activism through art. Much of the art on display in his gallery highlights issues on this topic and in particular single use plastics.
He was recently commissioned by Whitewoods Wellbeing near Bewerley, where he is the artist in residence, to create a collage of trees.
His latest collage involved collaging a Van Gogh portrait using discarded national lottery scratch cards. This was sold to a buyer in Leeds who visited the gallery.
James, who has lived in Pateley Bridge for more than 10 years, said:
“This is an area of outstanding natural beauty so I feel very lucky to live here and I am inspired in my art by all the nature in the local surroundings.”
“The idea of the official opening was to invite everyone local as a way of thanking them for their support and for them to see how I am developing my art business. “
Among those attending the opening was North Yorkshire deputy lieutenant, Professor David Hill, who gave a talk on environmental issues and praised James’ art for making a positive statement.
The gallery is open 11am to 3pm Wednesday to Friday. The Ripon City Photographic Society is also exhibiting at the gallery until July 30.

James (right) displays one of the pieces in the gallery.
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Major new exhibition seeks sponsors for young artists
Mercer Art Gallery in Harrogate is appealing for sponsors to support a major new exhibition this summer.
The show, called Total Recall: Myth and Memory, will feature archive works and new acquisitions, as well as some contemporary works by five young Northern artists.
Co-curator Joe Nickols said:
“We are exhibiting some highlights from our collections, including John Piper prints, paintings of Harrogate by John Atkinson Grimshaw, and intriguing works by Cândido Portinari.“New acquisitions come from Lisa Dracup, Kate Mellor, Caroline Walker, Dorothy Cross, and Martin Creed. To complement this we are working with five contemporary Northern artists to further the exhibitions resonance to our area and explore how art is developing. These artists are: Sally Barker, Ka Bird, Jill McKnight, K Walker, and Hang Zhang.“The exhibition is a great opportunity for these new artists to show their work in a public gallery. We are hoping to grow a budget of around £2,000, which will go to support the artists, transportation of artwork, and outreach production costs. The Mercer Art Gallery is striving to be more inclusive and grow engagement with the local community, and this exhibition is part of this progression.”

A detail from plmvlt, a 2021 work by Newcastle artist Ka Bird.
The exhibition, due to run from July 13 to the end of October, will feature some pieces that have been seldom seen, as well as others which may be more familiar to viewers, such as a copy of Work No. 88 by Turner Prize-winning artist Martin Creed. The work caused considerable controversy and made headlines internationally when it was first unveiled in 1995, as it consists simply of a “sheet of A4 paper crumpled into a ball”.
Joe said:
“Some people don’t enjoy that piece, but it does ask a lot of questions. What was it? What memory was inside it? What does it contain?”
Mercer Art Gallery is currently hosting an exhibition of works by Yorkshire-born Martin Creed, in collaboration with Tate and National Galleries of Scotland.
Creed’s Work No. 370 Balls 2004 fills the entire main gallery at the Mercer. The vast installation features nearly 1,000 balls of different scale, weight and texture. Visitors will also be able to see Creed’s iconic neon Work No. 890: Don’t Worry 2008 alongside Work No. 1340 2012, a large-scale wall painting of diagonal stripes.
Artist Rooms Martin Creed runs until July 2, and admission is free.
For information on Mercer Art Gallery and its exhibitions, go to its page on the North Yorkshire Council website.
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Artists throw open studio doors for region-wide exhibition
Artists across the district will be showing off their work over the first two weekends of June as part of the annual North Yorkshire Open Studios (NYOS) event.
Around 140 professional creatives working in every visual medium will open their studios right across the county, to promote and sell their work direct to the public in what has become one of the major events in the region’s cultural calendar.
One of them is Boroughbridge-based Andrea Mosey, who started painting during lockdown after finding her daughter’s old art materials. Since then, she has won this year’s British Contemporary Art award and routinely sells her paintings for up to £1,000. Her studio is in the grounds of Newby Hall, and visitors can access it free of charge over the open studio weekends. She said:
“It’s a lovely light-filled studio with huge picture windows, and I’ll have art for every different kind of budget, ranging from small fine art cards to prints to large oil paintings.”

Curlew by Jo Garlick, who is based near Masham and will be exhibiting over the first two weekends of June.
Harrogate College will also be opening up for its own NYOS exhibition, featuring new work by students on its two-year, part-time MA Creative Practice degree course.
Dr Annabel Smith, programme manager in MA Creative Practice at Harrogate College, said:
“Our MA students come from all walks of life and are often retiring or looking at switching direction and wanting to build on previous artist practice. This degree offers them a great way to change pathways and perhaps launch a new career, or just focus totally on their creative practice.
“The overriding motivation seems to be to grasp the chance of a new start by setting off in a really creative direction.
“The students consistently impress us by the quality of the art they produce, across so many mediums – and we can’t wait for the public to come and see some of their outstanding work at this exhibition.”
The NYOS exhibition’s first weekend will take place on Saturday, June 3 and Sunday 4, and the second will be on Saturday, June 10 and Sunday 11.
The Harrogate College MA students’ work will be available to view on campus each day from 10am to 5pm.
To find out how and where to view work by the 140 other featured artists, visit the North Yorkshire Open Studios website.
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