top of page

Kimmy McHarrie        

Fine Art Glass Mosaics

Kimmy McHarrie makes fine art mosaics using venetian glass, stone, shells,
gold leaf smalti , semi precious stones and found objects. 
Since her first exhibition in 2005 Kimmy has sold more than 400 works to customers worldwide.

Scroll down for story . . . .

IOMPO_CPP600x450_MarineMosaics.png
2024_ADD91_MarineMosaics_FirstDayCover_800x600_1.jpg

 

Basking shark featured in Ocean Conservation Research newsletter

https://ocean-noise.com/

 

Basking Shark Mosaic: Art as Overt Activism and Climate Solution

Amid the digital tapestry of Instagram’s new platform, Threads, dedicated to inspiring conversations, “artivism” has played a viral form of environmental advocacy. Artist Kimmy McHarrie’s monumental mosaic of a basking shark surrounded by plankton resounds as a rallying call for ocean conservation. Crafted 10 ft (over 3 m) in length, the mosaic stands as a visual testament to the diminishing basking shark population around the Isle of Man—plunging from 500 sightings in 2019 to just 8 sharks reported in 2021. Displayed prominently at Ronaldsway Airport, McHarrie’s masterpiece weaves local stone, repurposed glass, and found items into a vibrant tapestry that champions ocean conservation, sustainability, and the battle against the climate crisis. Accompanied by a poignant film featuring basking shark footage, interviews with marine biologists and local fishermen, this artful endeavor amplifies the importance of protecting our ocean’s fragile ecosystem and the myriad species that inhabit it. For as the saying goes, “A landscape that hasn’t been evocatively described becomes easier to destroy.” In an era where activism finds its voice in art, Kimmy McHarrie’s mosaic emerges as a resonant call to action, an embodiment of hope amid the ebb and flow of our oceanic journey. 

download.png
Basking Shark.JPEG
cropped-OCR-medallion-logotype-tagline-10-17-22RGB.jpg

A three metre long mosaic of a basking shark surrounded by plankton at Ronaldsway Airport Isle of Man

kimmy Sportsaman - Phil Miller Photograp

Photo : Phil Miller

My Story

I have spent my life creating in one way or another. My work reflects my love of nature, particularly the sea which has always played a large part in my life as I was born and brought up on the Isle of Man.
 
My work has always been collage led and I see mosaic as an extension of this, colour, shape and texture being all important. I try to bring a new approach to the ancient art of mosaic. Mosaic making is a very physical process. Each piece of coloured glass or stone is cut by hand using a hammer and hardie, the traditional mosaicist’s tools. The process I use for completing the mosaic is called the double reverse method, which I learnt in Ravenna, Italy, the historic centre of Byzantine mosaic. It involves 6 different processes. More technical info here.
 
It is always a challenge to produce work with “life” from such an un-giving medium and the limited colour palette available to me also imposes interesting constraints. The biggest obstacle to me is the length of time the work takes me to produce as I have so many pictures in my head but not enough time to create them all.  The fact that mosaic art is so ancient appeals to me, as does the tactile and organic quality of the work. Each piece of work is like a journey, beginning with an idea and ending somewhere I may not have expected. My work is not practical mosaic. I see it as painting, just in a different medium.
 
I was lucky enough to have been taught by the artist Norman Sayle R.I. who once remarked that one of his favourite things about water colour painting was the “happy accidents” that could happen. It is the same for me with mosaic as sometimes when hammering a piece of glass or stone, an amazing shape emerges and I will save it and sometimes even create a whole picture around it.

History

1049460 2.jpg
Screen Shot 2020-10-23 at 14.15.14.png

Endangered Species and Conservation

Kimmy was born and grew up in Castletown on the Isle of Man in  a cottage on the seafront. Her parents were both teachers and allowed her to pursue her passion for creating, painting, drawing and collage involving smashing up scallop shells  she found on the beach to make pictures. At aged 8 years old she won a competition with the finished picture.

After her art foundation course under the tutorage of Norman Sayle R.I. she went to Newcastle to study design and illustration. On completing her degree she moved to London where she worked as a freelance designer and illustrator having numerous illustrations published as greetings cards and in books and magazines.

 

Leaving London and reaching a milestone birthday she went to Ravenna in Italy to study mosaic making. Under the tutorage of Luciana Nottorni Kimmy was taught the "Double Reverse Method" of mosaic making. She now laughs at how she has come full circle and instead of smashing up scallop shells, she is breaking glass and stone to create works of art, albeit in a more sophisticated manner! 

Since her first exhibition in 2005 Kimmy has sold more than 400 works to customers worldwide.

Much of my work exhibited in my 2020 exhibition "Shattered"  reflects on all things threatened and endangered.

 

We are living in very challenging times where so many certainties have become uncertain and our normality has been turned upside down, shattered.

 

 As a human my only way of coping with the world is to gaze at the daisies and find solace in my surroundings as my sanity is endangered if I don’t!

The work below depicts many endangered species across the globe.

Endangered Hi Res 2.jpg

Endangered 2020  smalti and glass 900x500

Europe.

Bechstein’s Bat, Russia High Brown Fritillary, United Kingdom

Eastern Pasque Flower, Czech Republic

Africa

Baobab Tree, West Africa Chimpanzee, West Africa Rhim Gazelle, North Africa

Rothschild Giraffe, East Africa Gorilla, East Africa

Black Rhinoceros, South Africa Hooded Vulture, West Africa

South America

Short Tailed Chinchilla, Chile Orinoco Crocodile, Venezuela

Golden Lion Tamarin, Brazil Galapagos Giant Tortoise, Galapagos Islands

Green Sea Turtle, Atlantic Ocean Blue Whale, Pacific Ocean

North America

Polar Bear, Greenland  Franklin’s Bumble Bee, Oregon  Black Lace Cactus, Texas  California Condor, California

Eskimo Curlew, Alaska  Eastern Flowering Dogwood, Canada  Northern Leopard Frog, Canada  Moose, Canada

Leather Back Turtle, Atlantic Ocean  Atlantic Walrus, Atlantic Ocean  Right Whale, Atlantic Ocean

Asia

Bactrian Camel, Mongolia Sumatran Elephant, Sumatra Amur Leopard, Russia

Giant Panda, China White Stalk, Japan Beluga Sturgeon, Caspian Sea Bengal Tiger, India

Australia

Fire Coral, Tasman Sea Hector’s Dolphin, Pacific Ocean Krill, Indian Ocean Night Parrot, Eastern Australia

Short Nosed Sea Snake, Indian Ocean Black Flanked Rock Wallaby, Western Australia

Antarctica

Emperor Penguin, Antarctica

Sea%20Fan%20and%20Plankton_edited.jpg

Sea Fan Window

smalti and glass  set in 18thC Iron Frame

950 diameter

Phytoplankton and Zooplankton are the self-feeding components of the plankton community and a key part of oceans, seas and freshwater basin ecosystems.  Plankton serve as the base of the aquatic food web, providing an essential ecological function for all aquatic life.

Living diatoms (phytoplankton) make up a significant portion of the Earth's biomass: they generate about 20 to 50 percent of the oxygen produced on the planet each year.

Diatoms are used to monitor past and present environmental conditions, and are commonly used in studies of water quality.

I found this 200 year old French church window in Barrows, Faversham, an antique shop full of very beautiful and mysterious objects.

 

It seemed like the perfect frame for a mosaic but to make it was a challenge.

Along with the Pink Sea Fan it also features

Phyto Plankton and Zooplankton.

It could also be made into a table top with the addition of a glass top.

IMG_3820.jpg

Sea Fan

Nationally scarce and globally vulnerable. Here in the UK, the pink sea fan is protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

 

The pink sea fan is classified as Vulnerable on the global IUCN Red List.

Sailfish
Commission 2021

Site created by John Gallen

john@johngallen.com

bottom of page