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AMANDA WHITE

Spirits of the Place (Brontë Parsonage, Haworth) (Original Framed Collage)

£795.00

AMANDA WHITE

Spirits of the Place (Brontë Parsonage, Haworth) (Original Framed Collage)

£795.00

Product Details

Description: Brontë Parsonage, Haworth (home of the Brontë sisters): an original, one-off paper-cut collage work by Amanda White.

Unframed size approx: 49 x 39cm (19.3 x 15.4 inches)

Framed size approx: 62.8 x 52.8cm (24.7 x 20.8 inches)

Date of Artwork: 2025

Location of Signature: Bottom left and on reverse

Frame options: Black Wood with mount, Oak with mount, White Wood with mount, Putty Wood with mount

Please note: Our framers are recognised by the Fine Art Trade Guild for their quality because the custom frames have tightly pinned corners, and are made from precision cut wood in England, made bespoke for each order. All our frames are glazed with our Clarity+ Perspex. It's cut from the highest quality acrylic sheet that's both crystal clear, but also safe and filters out 99% of UV light to protect the artwork.

Read more about our FRAMING WORKSHOP here

 

THE HOUSE MUSEUM

In Spirits of the Place (Brontë Parsonage, Haworth)  Amanda White revisits one of her most enduring sources of inspiration, the Brontë Sisters and their home Haworth Parsonage on the Yorkshire Moors.  This site was the home to three remarkable sisters who each wrote masterpieces of classic English literature and which, since its opening as a museum, has been the object of literary pilgrimage for many.

For this collage, Amanda places the Parsonage in autumn as the golden leaves fall in the graveyard while inside, the windows of the house seem full of the night sky. Above the headstones, covered with moss and lichen, and between the chimney pots, the three sisters rise from the house, clutching their handwritten stories as they fly into the golden sky to their beloved moors beyond - a wonderful tribute to the gothic nature of the sisters’ writing.

 

THE STORY 

This new collection includes eight large-scale paper cut collages which, like a doll's house, invite you to peer into and explore - with a temptation to move the figures and play!

Paper-cut artist Amanda White is celebrated for her intricate collages of historical houses that once belonged to writers and artists. Originally trained as a theatre designer, Amanda carries this love of stage sets into her collaged worlds, each one appearing as though the curtains have just opened and a scene is unfolding.

A chance encounter with a pile of vintage Vogue magazines, found on the street, led Amanda to start working with the paper-cut technique. What else is an artist and theatre designer to do when confronted with such bounty? The rest is history and Amanda has now been working with paper-cut collages for many years. Her work has been exhibited in the UK, Spain and New York with pieces held in many private collections around the world and in institutions such as the Rutherston Collection, Manchester City Art Gallery and the Hogg Robinson Group. 

Amanda begins each new work with a deep dive into the subject, sketching compositions, researching the history and stories about the house and the people who visited. This research informs all of the details and materials that Amanda will gather before she starts her incredibly detailed paper cuts. 

Now using a multitude of different papers, collected over the years from old magazines (the National Geographic being a favourite), Amanda also uses old prints, posters, drawings - anything and everything is collected, cut up and carefully filed into categories and subjects including ‘masonry’ and ‘sky’ so they are easily ready for use when inspiration strikes. 

As a member of the Association of British Naive Artists it is no surprise that Amanda White’s influences are deeply folk art orientated. Asked for a list of inspiration, Amanda sent a list that reads as a love letter to that very specific English aesthetic: “I have a love of Staffordshire pottery, old textiles and plates, gardens, broadsheet woodcuts, William Blake, Alfred Wallis, Eric Ravilious, Edward Bawden, the Romantic movement, browsing in books, mooching in museums, Sussex, old buildings, cats, the sea”.