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Original pen and ink illustration

I created this hand-drawn illustration using pen and ink techniques.

It's crafted with loads of care and attention on some high-quality watercolor paper over several weeks of dedicated work. This piece is one-of-a-kind and part of my ongoing illustration artwork.

Sized at 11x29.7 cm, it's a neat addition to any space. I'll make sure to ship it out to you in protective packaging so it arrives safe and sound. Can't wait for you to have this unique artwork in your hands!

Regular price £70.00 GBP
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Lonely Pilgrim print by Stephen Holder

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Sent with care

Shipping

Your order is shipped in protective packaging to make sure it arrives safely to your door. If there are any issues with the order when it arrives, all you need to do is get in touch.

A 30-day promise

If the print isn't right when it arrives, return it within 30 days for a full refund. No questions asked.

About the Artist

Stephen Holder

I paint wildlife in watercolour, and I also work in abstract. Both start from the same place: a single creature, or a single form, held in a moment of charged stillness. The landscape falls away so there's nothing left to look at but the thing itself, the animal or the shape it dissolves into.

I'm drawn to solitary animals for the quality of attention they carry. A wolf alert at the edge of something. A raven watching. The abstract work chases that same held breath without a recognisable subject, energy caught the instant before it moves. Whatever that quality is, figurative or formless, I want the painting to hold it.

Stephen Holder, watercolour artist
Stephen Holder painting in watercolour

My Process

Watercolour

I paint wildlife in watercolour, using Winsor and Newton professional paints and paper. The work is about presence more than description. A single creature is held in a moment of charged stillness, the landscape stripped away so there's nothing left to look at but the animal itself.

I'm drawn to solitary animals for the quality of attention they carry: a wolf alert at the edge of something, a raven watching. Whatever that is, I want the painting to hold it.

The Abstract Work

Acrylic on canvas

The abstract paintings are usually acrylic on canvas, bigger and looser than the watercolours, built up in layers rather than caught in one sitting. Where a wildlife painting strips everything back to leave a single animal, these hold on to the energy alone, the movement without the creature that made it.

The shapes come from the same watching. Geometric patterns set against organic forms, sometimes a flower worked in, pushed together until they carry a tension of their own. I'm chasing the moment a shape almost resolves into something and then doesn't, pattern that holds the same charged stillness as an animal about to move, without ever telling you what it is.

Abstract acrylic painting by Stephen Holder