CLARE CLARKSON DEVELOPMENT
Creative Excellence of Clare Clarkson
I am excited to share the recent updates we've made to Clare Clarkson's website, showcasing her incredible work as a production designer, set designer, and art director. With years of experience in the industry, Clare has worked on numerous high-profile commercials and films, bringing a unique blend of creativity and precision to every project.
Clare's ability to create visually stunning environments that enhance storytelling is truly remarkable. From designing sets to overseeing their construction, her meticulous attention to detail ensures that every aspect of the production aligns with the director's vision. Some of her notable works include collaborations with renowned directors on projects like Women's Aid's "World's Strongest Women," Heathrow Christmas, and IONOS.
High-quality visuals are essential in highlighting such exceptional talent, and our recent updates aim to do just that. Visit Clare Clarkson’s updated website to explore her portfolio and learn more about her contributions to the world of production design.
Discover more about Clare Clarkson and her outstanding work at Clare Clarkson.
Popular psychology recommends engaging with something bigger than ourselves in order to heal a fragile mind, and Tim has described his personal story in relation to the work as a transformative journey from despair to high spirits. Stepping away from the dubious business of ‘self-expression’ he has instead deployed persistence and quiet discipline to record the daily phenomena of the sea. The result is a rich and complex narrative of the undisciplined behaviour of air and water; one in which dark clouds release a veil of rain far from the shore anticipating a storm, a whisp of cloud hovers in an almost clear sky, above a tranquil sea, or a full moon casts a nicotine hue across the dark water. Whilst we recognise the scene, the dramatic sensuality that emerges from each image’s composition and the powerful body of work seen together is less familiar.
In her famous love letter to the Cairngoms, ‘The Living Mountain’ Nan Shepherd describes moments in her relationship to the landscape when ‘something moves between me and it. Place and mind may interpenetrate until the nature of both are altered’. something has been altered here, and we are richer for it