
About Melvyn Evans: Imprinting the Land
Yorkshire landscape and coastline focus of new exhibition by artist Melvyn Evans at Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
The Yorkshire landscape and its dramatic coastline are the focus of Imprinting the Land, a new exhibition by artist Melvyn Evans at YSP.
Evans is a skilled artist, illustrator and printmaker, whose bold lino cut prints featuring seascapes and landscapes have been exhibited UK-wide. His work references our relationship with landscape and the power of place, a concern shared with many of the artists whose work is shown at YSP, from Henry Moore to Andy Goldsworthy.
Featuring original drawings, paintings and lino prints – all of which are available to buy – the exhibition draws on Evans’ fascination with the links between rural traditions and our connection to the British landscape. Evans explores sense of place through depictions of landmarks, monuments, chalk figures, coastal paths and fishing boats, using strong, bold imagery and a carefully considered colour palette.
Barbara Hepworth’s The Family of Man (1970) is one of YSP’s most iconic artworks which inspired Evans to produce an exclusive YSP limited edition to coincide with his exhibition. His tactile detailing and use of rich, burnished tones echo the textured finish of the sculptures, and Hepworth’s passion for her work to be ‘allowed to breathe’ outdoors.
A series of lino prints including Stone Forest (2019) and Lost Land (2019) feature the fossilised ruins of the submerged causeway, Doggerland. Situated between the east coast of England and continental Europe, Doggerland refers to an area of land flooded by rising sea levels around 6,500 BC. It can still be seen today at low tide in some areas of the country, particularly North Yorkshire’s Redcar beach.
Other works in the show take inspiration from Evans’ interest in ancient boundary markers such as the Hitchen Stone between Yorkshire and Lancashire; and natural elements of the landscape including Sea Stack and Queens Rock at Flamborough Head. The latter is used for navigation by boats sailing from the traditional North Yorkshire fishing ports of Whitby and Scarborough.
The exhibition is accompanied by an exclusive range of merchandise, designed by Evans, including a bone china mug, softback notebook, tea towel, and book bag.
You may also like
- Art Outdoors

Kimsooja: A Needle Woman: Galaxy was a Memory, Earth is a Souvenir
Kimsooja developed this elegant and towering conical sculpture in collaboration with scientists at Cornell University. The nanopolymer in which its panels are covered enhances the refractive qualities of light, giving an iridescent effect similar to that which occurs naturally on the wings of a butterfly or a beetle’s shell. It is responsive to changing light conditions and brought to life by sunlight on its surface. - Art Outdoors

Vanessa da Silva: Muamba Grove #3 and #4
Vanessa da Silva’s work includes sculpture, installation and performance focusing on issues of immigration, notions of territory, identity and displacement. - Art Outdoors

Damien Hirst: The Hat Makes the Man
The Hat Makes the Man is based on a 1920 collage of the same name by the Surrealist artist Max Ernst. Hirst has made a sculpture version with bronze casts of wooden pallets, like a sculptural collage. - Art Outdoors

Henry Moore: Large Totem Head
This sculpture is enlarged from a much smaller work made five years previously called Head: Boat Form and the resemblance to a hollowed-out boat remains clear. However, unlike that sculpture, which sat horizontally, Large Totem Head is raised to a standing form, assuming the totem-like presence of its title.





