Painted explorations of Dales vernacular buildings, archaeology, and the passage of time through landscape.
Tumbling Stones, Wiggly Tin is an exhibition by Hilary Grisewood that explores and celebrates the vernacular architecture of the Yorkshire Dales, particularly its dilapidated stone barns and corrugated iron buildings affectionately known as "wiggly tin." Inspired by the landscape, buildings, and ever-changing light, Grisewood reflects on how these structures carry the stories of past generations while gradually changing or disappearing.
Largely self-taught, Grisewood has painted and drawn since childhood, but it was after moving to the Dales that she was able to fully develop her practice. Her work is rooted in a longstanding fascination with archaeology and a desire to connect physically and emotionally with the past.
Working primarily in a figurative manner, drawing underpins her practice, with watercolours, acrylics, inks, and pastel used to build layers of texture and detail. Through this process, Grisewood explores themes of history, memory, and the passage of time, balancing careful observation with an emotional response to an austere yet beautiful, and increasingly vanishing, world.
| Season (16 Sept 2026 - 20 Dec 2026) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Day | Times | |
| Monday - Tuesday | Closed | |
| Wednesday - Sunday | 10:30 | - 16:00 |
We are situated on the A684 Garsdale to Hawes Road just one mile east of Sedbergh. Please use this post code if you are using a satnav LA10 5LP
Approaching from the M6: Leave at Junction 37 and drive five miles through stunning Howgills landscape to Sedbergh, England's Book Town, from where you can follow brown tourist signs to Farfield Mill.
From Hawes: Taking the A684 from Hawes (15 miles), Farfield Mill's entrance is on the right. Just follow the brown tourist signs.
From Kirkby Lonsdale: Head north on the A683, follow signs to Sedbergh from where you will pick up brown tourist signs to Farfield Mill.
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