ACID FOLK ART

Founded in the Winter of ‘22, WYTCH is the beginning of a project that is the culmination of a life’s interest in the visual arts, psychedelia, magick and the strange.

Light Bends in Imaginary Gardens

I’m currently exhibiting at Dimbola on the Isle of Wight, and delighted to announce that my show has been extended until the 19th of May 2024. The show consists of a collection of antique frames and mirrors, on which I paint a photo sensitive liquid emulsion, and then expose negatives of my photographs onto the coated surface. The mirrors are then developed and fixed in the darkroom, as you would a print. Dimbola was the home of pioneering Victorian photographer Julia Margaret Cameron, and my exhibition is in the room which was her studio.

Click image below to find out more.


Just Arrived.

Impressive pair of Dutch gilt metal candlesticks (or pricket sticks), with stunning depictions of the ‘all seeing eye’ on their bases. Made in the Netherlands in 1848.

The Eighth and Ninth Witch-Cult (2017)


18th Century Portal.

I’ve recently acquired something a bit special - an exquisitely painted cornucopia, narrow mahogany door depicting ‘Father Time’. A truly unique piece, it is available to purchase here


Sorcerers Mirrors.

Popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when interest in the occult was at its peek. These mirrors offer the possibility of access to the other side of the veil.

Austin Osman Spare

Our Austin Osman Spare works have now sold, but please check back in the coming weeks because we have more to add.

Something from eastern esotericism; imported from India, we have a collection of vintage framed prints of Hindu Gods dating from the middle of the last century. Please click on an image to view in shop.


Silver Gelatin

A number of pieces from ‘Light Bends in Imaginary Gardens’, including 'Pulling Landscapes into the Frontal Lobe through a Tiny Hole' (below), are available to purchase in the shop.


‘Boreas Borthwood’


‘Undercliff Drive’


‘Thought Camera #1’


‘Portal led to a Hidden Wood’


‘Midsummer Eve’