Felix H. Wilkinson is an artist led, not for profit, online gallery. Selling unique affordable art directly from emerging and established artists. Paintings, limited edition prints, small sculptural assemblages and painted skateboards. Plus posts from artists and interviews with creatives.

If you buy directly from us, you can rest assured that all the funds benefit the artists.

A new series by Nel Burke – Vulvas

Nel Burke works in series and this new set of collages is all about sexuality and being female. Constructed from images of Baroque paintings they are sensual and inviting. Read More…


New collages from Shaun Caton. See more…

Hand made analogue collage by Sel;wyn Pike
Selwyn Pike

Felix’s Choice

The Boy

Contemporary artist Selwyn Pike grew up in South London where he still lives. He makes collages from old photographs, cigarette cards, stamps old envelopes and various ephemera. Influenced by Kurt Schwitters and Joseph Cornell, his work is full of loss and longing for the past. See more…

A selection of our artist’s work

Post

  • Cool World and some thoughts about my paintings
    Cool World Duncan McAfee. Talking about Ralph Bakshi’s animation: I first chanced on Cool World, some time in 2016 and it changed the way I approach painting. Cool World is Ralph Bakshi’s wonderfully flawed 1992 feature about a cartoon dimension that exists in parallel with the real world. The premise of the film is ridiculous,
  • Collage
    Collagist, Nel Burke talks about her influences and the Instagram collage community Art history tells us collage started with Picasso and Braque, and flows through the twentieth century via Surrealism, Schwitters and Dada: these are the established threads through time, the links which connect collagists through to the twenty-first century.  Tearing and cutting, fracturing, displacement
  • London’s Housing Crisis
    London’s Housing Crisis by Felix H. Wilkinson ‘Make me wanna holler’ is a line from Marvin Gaye’s seminal tune Inner City Blues. It’s as relevant today as it was in the late sixties, but for different reasons.  At that time our cities were suffering from decay and urban blight.  Today, issues of affordability and inequality

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