Voici le soir charmant, ami du criminel;
II vient comme un complice, à pas de loup; le ciel
Se ferme lentement comme une grande alcôve,
Et l'homme impatient se change en bête fauve.
Charles Baudelaire, Le Crépuscule du Soir
Behold the charming evening, friend to the criminal;
It comes as an accomplice, stealthily; the sky
Closes over slowly like a great alcove
And the impatient man turns into a wild beast.
“Entre chien et loup” is a French expression which comes from the mediaeval latin infra horum vespertinam, inter canem et lupum and alludes to the momentary liminality between day and night, when a wolf can easily be mistaken for a dog.
It can also signify the instability of the world and mind - moments of transition, ambivalence, uncertainty. Across cultures, the threshold signals the boundary between the domesticated and the wild, the known and the unknown, and the psychological transformation that occurs when these worlds meet.
In Persian folklore, the wolf’s tail denotes the first light, the false dawn. Ingmar Bergman’s film The Hour of the Wolf describes the pre-dawn moment when nightmares intensify, fears peak, and the boundary between rationality and the irrational thins, yet this is also the time when new life and possibility emerge.
Just as dusk transforms and distorts the landscape, the liminal twilight state of the mind awakens the imagination.
Diane Howse approaches painting as a process of discovery. Working directly with oil paint and oil stick on linen, she lets colour, gesture, and material guide each work as layers are built, altered, and partially removed. Forms emerge only through this physical exchange, where vivid and muted tones meet in shifting relationships and marks range from broad sweeps to quick, incisive gestures. Remaining entirely abstract, the layered surfaces invite the viewer’s imagination, prompting fleeting associations that appear and dissolve within the movement of colour and texture. Rooted in a heightened attentiveness to visual experience, Howse’s paintings translate moments of perception into material form, instigating pareidolic visions in the eye of the observer.
Andrew Hewish’s collage works combine draughstman’s sensibility with the layering of amusing sentiment and visually arresting effects. The archaic diction of excerpted historic text functions as part concrete poetry, part satirical gesture towards a mystifying or crepuscular knowledge. Together with a sensuous visuality of carefully selected images on prepared grounds of wash, graphite and ink, these works retain the radical charge of collage and the shock of dissonance whilst producing a satisfying new synthesis.Jonathan Schofield is interested in the transformation of experiences - to follow an idea of dandyism developed by Baudelaire - the ‘immutable ephemeral’, painting as luminous - painting as a way to hold time. The liminality of existence, poised between night and day, defies the certainty of assumptions; this ambiguity is ever-present in Schofield’s paintings. In The Birthdays, a homage to Gauguin, a figure offers a gift or a maybe sacrifice to another woman wearing a crown. The Huntress wears a dress beginning to transmogrify, taking on elements of the landscape, as she seems to be transforming too. In the series painted on reclaimed palettes, the Arttist uses the “circular thumb hole” as a visual synonym for the Moon, and then builds a scene around it. In Lycanthropy, a figure emerges from the gloam of a forest; the observer’s eyes, adjusting to the light, may wonder if a metamorphosis is in progress.
Together, Howse, Hewish, and Schofield invite viewers into the liminal space “entre chien et loup,” where perception shifts, imagination awakens, and the ordinary transforms into the extraordinary.
About the Artists
Diane Howse
Diane Howse approaches painting as a process of discovery. Working directly with oil paint and oil stick on linen, she lets colour, gesture, and material guide each work as layers are built, altered, and partially removed. Forms emerge only through this physical exchange, where vivid and muted tones meet in shifting relationships and marks range from broad sweeps to quick, incisive gestures. Remaining entirely abstract, the layered surfaces invite the viewer’s imagination, prompting fleeting associations that appear and dissolve within the movement of colour and texture. Rooted in a heightened attentiveness to visual experience, Howse’s paintings translate moments of perception into material form, instigating pareidolic visions in the eye of the observer.
Andrew Hewish
Andrew Hewish’s collage works combine draughtsman’s sensibility with the layering of amusing sentiment and visually arresting effects. The archaic diction of excerpted historic text functions as part concrete poetry, part satirical gesture towards a mystifying or crepuscular knowledge. Together with a sensuous visuality of carefully selected images on prepared grounds of wash, graphite and ink, these works retain the radical charge of collage and the shock of dissonance whilst producing a satisfying new synthesis.
Jonathan Schofield
Jonathan Schofield is interested in the transformation of experiences, to follow an idea of dandyism developed by Baudelaire, the ‘immutable ephemeral’, painting as luminous, painting as a way to hold time. The liminality of existence, poised between night and day, defies the certainty of assumptions. This ambiguity is ever present in Schofield’s paintings. In The Birthdays, a homage to Gauguin, a figure offers a gift or a maybe sacrifice to another woman wearing a crown. The Huntress wears a dress beginning to transmogrify, taking on elements of the landscape, as she seems to be transforming too. In the series painted on reclaimed palettes, the artist uses the circular thumb hole as a visual synonym for the Moon, and then builds a scene around it. In Lycanthropy, a figure emerges from the gloam of a forest. The observer’s eyes, adjusting to the light, may wonder if a metamorphosis is in progress.
Together, Howse, Hewish, and Schofield invite viewers into the liminal space “entre chien et loup,” where perception shifts, imagination awakens, and the ordinary transforms into the extraordinary
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Diane HowseAureole, 2025Oil and oil stick on linen50 x 70 cmSigned and dated verso -
Diane HowseFlux, 2026Oil and oil stick on linen40 x 50 cmSigned and dated verso -
Diane HowseHoard, 2026Oil and oil stick and metallic pigment on linen50 x 70 cmSigned and dated verso -
Diane HowseHour of the Wolf, 2026Oil and oil stick on canvas80 x 100 cmSigned and dated verso
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Diane HowseLight Shift, 2026Oil and oil stick on linen50 x 70 cmSigned and dated verso -
Diane HowseNight Edge, 2026Oil and oil stick on linen30 x 40 cmSigned and dated verso -
Diane HowseRed in the Dark, 2026Oil and oil stick on linen50 x 70 cmSigned and dated verso -
Diane HowseWolf Light, 2026Oil and oil stick on linen50 x 70 cmSigned and dated verso
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Andrew HewishI render you helpless, 2026Collage Ink Pigment Graphite on Paper on Board40.6 x 30.5 cmSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishIt's worth all the trouble, 2026Collage on paper on board50.8 x 40.4 cmSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishMaster of the Unknown, 2026Ink, paint, collage on paper on board30 x 20 cm -
Andrew HewishSomething resulting from a profound desire to escape, 2026Collage on paper30 x 20 cmSigned and dated versoSold
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Andrew HewishStrength of Will, 2026Collage on paper on board76 x 61 cmSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishThere wasn't a cloud in the sky, 2026Collage Ink Pigment Graphite on Paper on Board76 x 61 cmSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishWrapped in the Bright Silken Cocoon of a Dream, 2026(Diptych) Collage on Paper on Panel30 x 42 cm totalSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishElaborate and Fairly Tasteful, 2026Collage on paper50.8 x 40.4 cmSigned and dated verso
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Andrew HewishAnd with the light did shine, 2026Collage on paper on board25.4 x 20.3 cmSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishMaster of the Unknown, 2026Ink, paint, collage on paper on board30 x 20 cm -
Andrew HewishAn attempt to grasp the poetry of the living, 2026Collage on paper on board50.8 x 40.4 cmSigned and dated verso -
Andrew HewishEntre Chien et Loup, 2026Egg tempera on linen on panel61 x 51 cmSigned and dated verso
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Jonathan SchofieldLycanthropy, 2025Oil on panel40 x 30 cmSigned and dated verso -
Jonathan SchofieldThe Wheels are the Moon, 2026Oil on panel45 x 30 cmSigned and dated verso -
Jonathan SchofieldThe Birthdays, 2026Oil on linen150 x 125 cmSigned and dated verso -
Jonathan SchofieldBumbag, 2025Oil on panel45 x 30 cmSigned and dated verso


