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PeterCorr@hotmail.com
+44 (0)1353 610 280
Cambridgeshire, England


Returning to the Studio — On Creative Inactivity, Risk, and the Alchemy of Materials
Every painter knows the experience of stalled momentum — the studio that feels resistant, the canvas that offers nothing back. This post reflects on what that state actually is, and on the particular discipline of returning to work not when inspiration arrives, but before it does.
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The Cambridgeshire Fenlands — Presentation to the Royal Photographic Society
In May 2023 I gave a presentation to the Royal Photographic Society Contemporary Group at a two-day event held at Foxton, Cambridgeshire. The theme of the weekend centred on the vulnerability of the Fenland area — its exposure to rising sea levels, coastal erosion, and the pressures on a highly industrialised agricultural landscape. New Bedford River, Sutton Gault The Fenland Landscape When I began this project, I had no specific objective in mind. I was simply drawn to the u
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Peter Corr — Landscape Painter
I have been painting landscapes for over fifty years, working primarily in oil and cold wax. My practice is rooted in the Cambridgeshire landscape — its flatness, its particular quality of light, the way the horizon holds everything in a kind of suspension. This is a brief introduction to the work and the thinking behind it.
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Fenland Photography — A Book Cover Commission
I was recently contacted by a book publisher looking for a suitable image for the front cover of a new title. He was searching for something dark and mysterious to represent the Fenlands — and had come across my photography project completed during the lockdown period. 'Cambridgeshire Fenlands' Photography by: Peter Corr The Fenland Photography Project Followers of this blog may recall the project I completed during lockdown: a series of black and white photographs of the Cam
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'Looking Glass World' — Gold, Oil and Cold Wax
The Fenlands of Britain exist in an imaginary space — out of time and out of step with an increasingly homogenised and utilitarian world. They are made up of woodlands, wet grasslands, marsh, bogs, meadows, and shallow ponds, teeming with life. There is a constant visual interplay between grasses, reeds, and water; between bramble, branches, and sky. Slow-moving rivers, lodes, and streams are seen through a tracery of golden arches and erratic parabolas. A rhythmic dance of c
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'Fenland' — A Photography Book
'Fenland' — A Photography Book 'Fenland' is a photography book documenting the Cambridgeshire Fenland landscape — a body of work made over several years, with the majority of the photographs taken during the winter of 2020/21. The book brings together black and white images of the Fenland's characteristic topography: dykes and rivers, tilted telegraph poles, uneven roads disappearing into the distance, and the isolated farmhouses and farm buildings that punctuate the flat ter
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'Between Worlds' — Painting the Cambridgeshire Fenlands
Damien Hirst used formaldehyde; he would have been better served by an eco-friendly peat bog. 'Between Worlds' abstract Fenland painting..
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Materials, Tools and the Unconventional: 'Shallow Lands'
'Shallow Lands' 100 x 100 cm Mixed Media on C Paint can be applied with almost anything that will hold it. I rarely use brushes in my current work — not from any aversion to them, but because working with brushes alone tends to return me to a familiar repertoire of marks and painterly qualities that become predictable over time. The introduction of unconventional materials and tools has been both liberating and demanding, opening up surface possibilities that a brush simply c
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Fields, Rivers and Dreams — The Fenland Landscape from Above
Fields, Rivers and Dreams — The Fenland Landscape from Above Seen from above, the Cambridgeshire Fenlands reveal a geometry that is invisible at ground level. The dykes and drains run in straight lines across the flat terrain, dividing the land into rectangles and parallelograms of varying colour and texture. The rivers wind between them, their curves a counterpoint to the rigidity of the drainage system. From the air, the Fens look like a vast, abstract painting — a composit
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