Exhibited Artists

  • Nick Aliberti (b. 2000) is a sculptor who works with discarded and repurposed industrial materials. Collected, cut, burnt, scored, oxidised, and ultimately assembled, Aliberti maintains that process is at the heart of his practice. A recent graduate of The Slade School of Fine Art, his work is intricately rhythmic and commands its presence.

    Nick Aliberti’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Pleasure, October 2023.

  • Will Barras is an artist, illustrator and animation director living and working in London. Barras became one of a new crop of young artists working within Bristol’s street art scene appearing in Scrawl the book, becoming a founding member of the Scrawl Collective. Barras is noted for his representations of fluid movement, unique narrative driven composition and line work.

    Will Barras’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Charlie Boothright (b. 2001) is a painter who, while searching for composition, is simultaneously experimenting with new and unexpected ways to record lived experience through paint. For Boothright the brush works, but sometimes a palette knife, glove, or simply the paint alone works better. She is far from shy of her media, and often at her best she is far from delicate with it. Boothright is a recent graduate of Camberwell College of Arts.

    Charlie Boothright’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Cut Out Series 1, May 2023.

  • James Carey, also known as O.Two, creates work based on abstractions of the written type-form. Working initially with spray-paint on large scale murals, he has built a working process that when applied to canvas, lures the viewer into mists of dark, ambient colour illuminated by bold, abstract gestures. The works are intricate, refined adaptations of a distant teenage delinquency. They offer glimpses of a guilty rhythm, hooded themes and veiled motives.

    James Carey’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Mia Casati (b. 2001) is a painter for whom painting is a process of tapping into one’s own psyche and cultivating a relationship with one’s own emotions. It is a process akin to the process of living: one of trials and tribulations. From there a painting is born, delicate and intense.

    Mia Casati’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Pleasure, October 2023.

  • Eva Dixon (b. 2000) is a textile artist. Dixon’s practice is centred around her interest in construction. The aesthetics of liminality, of spaces in the making, have had a profound impact on her work: not only are hazard-warning colours set against muted and earthy tones, but so too are voids juxtaposed with substance, works hung on pullies, and technical fabrics used in abundance. Dixon recently graduated from Central St Martins where she studied Fine Art.

    Eva Dixon’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Pleasure, October 2023.

  • Charlie Gosling (b. 2000) is a painter who is rarely found sculpting form by blending strokes – he relies on the viewer’s eye to merge each brushstroke with those it borders. His pictures, patchworks of subtly selected paints and delicately applied brush strokes, become convincing portraits and powerful mementos of a time shared between painter and sitter.

    Charlie Gosling’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Cut Out Series 1, May 2023.

  • The self-taught maverick photographer Ted Gushue has changed the way we look at modern car photography. A millennial Slim Aarons, his work can be found in the homes of distinguished collectors and car enthusiasts alike. Gushue’s work is modern, iconic and somewhat transcendental. One part revelatory and always a celebration of the subject matter, simply put, Gushue's photographs remind you how good it is to be alive.

    Ted Gushue’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Built Not Bought, July 2022, and at the screening of Type 7’s film featuring DSC, October 2022.

    Prints from Ted Gushue are available in the HM store.

  • Kristian Hammerstad is a Norwegian artist and illustrator. His client list includes Penguin Books, The New Yorker, The New York Times and Le Monde amongst others. He lives in Oslo.

    Kristian Hammerstad’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Jamie Hewlett is best known for his anti-heroin Tank Girl and his collaboration with Blur front man Damon Albarn and the band Gorillaz. Jamie won the Design Museum’s ‘Designer of the Year’ award in May 2006 for his work on Gorillaz. Most recently he has again collaborated with Daman Albarn, this time on the set and costume designs for the acclaimed Chinese opera Monkey: Journey To The West.

    Jamie Hewlett’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Logan Hill is a photographer. A master of understatement, Hill is one of the last free sprits that has the ability to float around the planet yet somehow find roots in some truly fascinating cultures.

    Logan Hill’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Built Not Bought, July 2022.

    Prints from Logan Hill are available in the HM store.

  • Damien Hirst uses a varied practice of installation, sculpture, painting and drawing to explore the complex relationships between art, religion, science, life and death. Over ninety solo Hirst exhibitions have taken place worldwide since 1987, and his work has been included in over three hundred group shows. His contribution to British art over the preceding two and a half decades was recognised in 2012 with a major retrospective of his work staged at Tate Modern.

    Damien Hirst’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Norman Hyams (b. 1966) studied Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art, graduating in 2006, and in 2016 he completed the Turps Art School Studio Programme. As a painter and as a curious human being, he is sometimes dumbfounded by the tangible, despite his knowledge of the intangible; as much as he is a painter in his late fifties, he is a child. He is at once a stargazer and an astronomer.

    Norman Hyam’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Cut Out Series 1, May 2023.

  • Anna Kowalski (b. 2001) is a painter who recently graduated from Chelsea College of Arts. Her practice constantly revolves around the theme of time; how the past influences the present and how nostalgia warps memory.

    Anna Kowalski’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Pleasure, October 2023.

  • Berlin based Thomas Mareki is a renaissance man of the streets. Under the name Marok, Mareki forged a prominent path as a graffitti artist before founding the highly respected and critically claimed art and culture magazine Lodown. Today, Thomas continues to make art installations across Europe while maintaining his zeitgeist publication.

    Thomas Mareki’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Mike Martin grew up in the Ozarks listening to the one radio station, riding BMX bikes through the woods. He often says that he didn’t quite realise at the time that bikes would take me to places both physical and imaginative – art school, California, San Francisco, film, photo, and MASH.

    Mike Martin’s work was exhibited at HM Electric during Built Not Bought, July 2022.

    Prints from Mike Martin are available in the HM store.

  • Philip Morgan’s striking work is the ultimate in post-modern street art, taking well-known elements from worldwide pop culture, and re-purposing them with a wink, a smile and (fairly often) a middle finger. Morgan’s work borrows from the aesthetics of previous eras – including ‘70s psychedelia, ‘80s technology and ‘90s street culture, and drags them firmly up to the present day in new and twisted forms. Working in an incredibly versatile range of formats – murals, graphic design, skateboard art, paintings and screen prints are all in his wheelhouse.

    Philip Morgans’ work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Benedict Radcliffe works across a wide spectrum of disciplines, creating everything from cars and bicycles to furniture and household objects, as well as architectural commissions and signature sculptural pieces for clients across the globe. Radcliffe staged his first exhibition in Glasgow, featuring his ‘modern Japanese classic’ – a full size 3D wire-frame Subaru Impreza. In the 2011 The Power of Making show at the Victoria & Albert Museum, his work featured alongside Thomas Heatherwick and Ron Arad.

    Benedict Radcliffe’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • Since 1998, Hans Sures has worked as designer, art director, creative director and photographer in London and Los Angeles. Rather accidentally, Sures resumed illustrative work and painting around 2009, and has been moving paint around full-time since 2012.

    Hans Sures’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.

  • William Van Hoorn (b. 2000) is a painter whose often varied manipulation of his medium results in consistently rich and strong works. Accomplished at attaining effect with both oil paint and card collage, Van Hoorn is combines the severe aesthetic of collage with a comparative looseness of painting.

    William Van Hoorn’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of Cut Out Series 1, May 2023, and Pleasure, October 2023.

  • Dave White is a contemporary British artist who dedicates his work to celebrating popular culture and interpreting emotive issues. White pioneered the ‘sneaker art’ movement in 2002, with the execution of pop art inspired sneaker oil portraits. White is one of a handful of artists to have his own signature Jordan releases.

    Dave White’s work was exhibited at HM Electric as part of War, September 2018.