BIOGRAPHY

This series explores the Dorset landscape in the moments after sunset, when day gives way to night and the land enters a quiet state of transition. The moon is sometimes present and sometimes absent, glimpsed through drifting cloud or waiting just beyond the horizon as the land settles into the deepening glow of early night. At times its light gently washes across the land; at others, I turn away from the last traces of twilight to observe the scene dissolving into the inky blue of nightfall. These shifting conditions shape how the land is seen, inviting a slower and more contemplative way of looking.

The Purbeck Hills surrounding my home are threaded with pathways that follow high ridgeways overlooking the sea. Once, they offered safe passage for early travellers, and the county remains scattered with burial sites, Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements, stone circles, and hillforts — enduring traces of those who were drawn here by fertile soils and natural resources. Purbeck stone and Kimmeridge shale supported building and trade from the Iron Age through Roman and later periods, while the natural harbour at Poole, sheltered by defensively advantageous hills, provided opportunities for trade, fishing, and agriculture.

Standing on these seemingly timeless ridgeways as night falls, the diminishing light softens the signs of modern presence. In the quiet, it becomes possible to imagine an earlier relationship between people and place, and to reflect on the enduring connection between landscape, history, and memory.