Wenna Trevail
Tachiste shimmer of Cornish water
Wenna Trevail is a fictional Cornish painter imagined as growing up between the wooded creeks of the Helford and the open Atlantic light beyond Zennor. Trained as a printmaker before turning to oil, she developed a tachiste method of layered, floating marks that records water as movement rather than place. Her work is grounded in the Cornish modernist pursuit of light, rhythm and landscape sensation, while remaining a distinct contemporary invention. She treats sea, river, pool and rain as living membranes where weather, memory and perception continually pass through one another.
Wenna Trevail’s fictional studio language turns Cornish water into hovering constellations of oil marks: river-glints, tidal flicker, spray, shadow and reflected sky held in vibrating suspension. Her paintings sit between St Ives modernist abstraction and close observation, where every surface seems to breathe, ripple and dissolve.
Inspirations
- Bryan Wynter’s shimmering water abstractions
- St Ives modernist landscape rhythm
- Helford River creeks and tidal woods
- Atlantic light around Zennor and Porthmeor
- Tachisme and gestural post-war abstraction
- Cornish rain, mist, pools and estuaries
Signature features
- hovering comma-shaped oil marks suspended over translucent glazes
- dense optical shimmer suggesting ripples without literal waves
- softly gridded understructure like tide maps or river currents
- small bright flecks of white, silver and lemon acting as light sparks
- muted Cornish blues, greens and greys warmed by ochre undertones
- edges that dissolve into mist, spray or reflected sky
- layered depth with dark submerged forms beneath luminous surface marks
- compositions balanced between abstraction and glimpsed coastal observation
10 works in the collection.