Works
  • Kerry Eggleton, Doe
    Doe£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Aligator on Sax
    The Aligator on Sax£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Aligator on Trumpet
    The Aligator on Trumpet£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Badger
    The Badger£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Bear and Bicycle
    The Bear and Bicycle£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cat
    The Cat£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Chameleon
    The Chameleon£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cifonelli Crocodile
    The Cifonelli Crocodile£ 195.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cifonelli Fox
    The Cifonelli Fox £ 195.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cifonelli Hare
    The Cifonelli Hare£ 195.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cifonelli Horse
    The Cifonelli Horse£ 195.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cifonelli Leopard
    The Cifonelli Leopard£ 195.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Cifonelli Rhino
    The Cifonelli Rhino £ 195.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Flamingo
    The Flamingo£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Fox and Umbrella
    The Fox and Umbrella£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Gazelle
    The Gazelle£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Giraffe
    The Giraffe£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Hare
    The Hare£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Highland Bull
    The Highland Bull£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Horse
    The Horse£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Lion
    The Lion£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Moose
    The Moose£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Raccoon
    The Raccoon£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Rhino
    The Rhino£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Scottish Terrier
    The Scottish Terrier £ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Snow Leopard
    The Snow Leopard £ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Stag
    The Stag£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Swan
    The Swan£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Tigress
    The Tigress£ 135.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Vixen
    The Vixen£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Wolf of Wall Street
    The Wolf of Wall Street £ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Wolf with a Blue Tie
    The Wolf with a Blue Tie£ 95.00
  • Kerry Eggleton, The Zebra
    The Zebra£ 95.00
Overview

The Menagerie

Artist Kerry Eggleton creates vibrant and characterful anthropomorphic animals. Anthropomorphism has ancient roots as a literary device in storytelling, and also in art. Most cultures have traditional fables with anthropomorphised animals, which can stand and talk like humans, as characters. One of the oldest known examples is the Lion man, a human-shaped figurine with a lion's head carved from a mammoth tusk, estimated to be 40,000 years old. Intrigued by these hybrid forms which resonate throughout history and across cultures; Kerry has created contemporary characters in the style of a Victorian engraving, harking back to the golden age of the British circus. 

Roll up! Roll up for Mashka's Marvellous Menagerie!

Biography

The Creative Process

Kerry starts out with a character style in mind and scours charity shops or borrows/hires the clothing required. She then photographs a model wearing these in various stances appropriate to the character, which start to bring it to life.

 

Kerry then digitally manipulates these photographs together with animal imagery and once she is happy with her creation (this can take a while), she splits the image into separate colour layers. She then manually develops each image onto screens using light sensitive emulsion and an exposure unit. The process is similar to developing a photograph, but working with positives rather than negatives. Once the screens are ready, Kerry carefully mixes each ink colour by hand and hand-pulls it through the individual screens, layer by layer, to recreate the images manually. 

 

The screen-printing process can be hard work, as each of her colour pieces requires at least 20 pulls and plenty of elbow grease to keep washing out the multiple screens, but it yields incredibly satisfying results. Through this process Kerry transforms the initial precision of the digital image into a vibrant piece of art with wonderful ink density. As the prints are lovingly hand created, each is unique (although part of an edition), offering more charm and individuality than digitally created prints; making them more prized and collectable artworks as a result

Events
Art Fairs