Featuring a dandelion, meticulously screen-printed here in our Dalston studios and exclusive to Print Club London, this multi-layered work is beautifully delicate and richly detailed. Reminiscent of Victorian flower illustrations,...
Featuring a dandelion, meticulously screen-printed here in our Dalston studios and exclusive to Print Club London, this multi-layered work is beautifully delicate and richly detailed. Reminiscent of Victorian flower illustrations, the print works perfectly as a striking standalone piece or displayed as part of a set of three. Available exclusively at Print Club London.
Sophie is deeply committed to the preservation and restoration of our natural world, exploring our place — and responsibility — within it. With a nod to vintage botanical illustration, her bold yet sensitive screen prints celebrate the often overlooked wild flora that continues to thrive on the streets near her London home. Pairing vivid colour with rich black backgrounds, and strong graphic forms with intricate, translucent layers, Sophie uses these visual contrasts to reflect the tensions she observes in nature: strength and fragility, resilience and loss, and her own intertwined feelings of sorrow and joy.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Sophie Tait
Sophie studied Fine Art at Wimbledon before pausing her own creative practice to pursue a career in advertising. After stepping back to focus on family, she returned to art following a chance encounter with a screen-printing workshop — and hasn’t looked back since.
Her work is rooted in a deep commitment to the preservation and restoration of the natural world, and to exploring our responsibility within it. Drawing inspiration from vintage botanical illustration, Sophie creates bold, contemporary screen prints celebrating the overlooked wild flora and fauna that continue to thrive on the streets near her London home. Vivid colours sit against rich black backgrounds, while strong graphic forms are layered with intricate, translucent details. These visual contrasts mirror the tensions Sophie observes in nature — between strength and fragility, resilience and loss — and reflect her own complex emotions of sorrow and joy.