Theo Crutchley-Mack

Theo Crutchley- Mack is a contemporary British artist whose work appears in private and public collections throughout the UK. As a teenager Theo designed a 50 pence coin that was minted international circulation with royal approval, sparking a clear artistic direction from a young age. Since graduating from Falmouth University with a sell-out degree show, he has continued to exhibit successfully throughout Wales and Cornwall for 5 years.

In 2018, Theo was invited to the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia where he painted and documented the ruined whaling stations to help fundraise for the South Georgia Heritage Trust, who work to restore the damaged habitats of native wildlife on the island. The ramshackle quality of these ruins had a significant effect on his work and its progression.

Theo strives to record the obscure landscape, often abandoned and remote. He spends many hours outside drawing in sketchbooks that later become reference for larger studies. His studio paintings start out as wooden panels which are built up with multiple layers of splintered wood. This process forms the foundation for a sculptural approach to oil painting in which the underlying textures are often more prominent than the paint itself.