British artist Carole Hodgson's (1940-2025) work includes a versatile material range and a personal visual vocabulary to depict the awareness and sensation of nature. Exhibiting with Angela Flowers since the 1970s, Slade-trained Hodgson worked with a variety of materials ranging from bronze, glass, gouache on paper, and etching to cellulose fibre and concrete. Based between London and Wales, her influences were equally eclectic, including ancient Greek sculpture, the Welsh landscape, and Edwin Smith's photographs of mantlepieces. Hodgson's work, however, transmuted its sources and materials into a unique and consistent oeuvre, concerned with the enduring universality of form and beauty.
Carole Hodgson is represented in public collections including the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Arts Council of Great Britain, British Council, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff, and Tate, London.