Studio Visit

Miranda Hine’s Alluring Paintings Of English House Museums

The joy of creating underpins Miranda Hine’s oil paintings depicting quiet interior and still life scenes.

Her new exhibition, Making Beds opening at MARS Gallery this Thursday, offers glimpses into English historic house museums — a world Miranda is deeply familiar with as an interpretation developer at London’s Natural History Museum.

Slightly translucent, legible brushstrokes bring a softness to a typically sombre palette, which Miranda manipulates to provoke discussions around these ‘highly personal yet absurdly public spaces.’

Written
by
Amelia Barnes
|
Photography
by

Miranda Hine in her Wapping, London studio.

Miranda creates using oil paints on gessoed hardboard — a base specifically selected for its ‘slipperiness’ and absorbency.

Thinner is used to fluidify the paint, creating the soft, legible, and slightly transparent brush strokes that characterise Miranda’s work.

Originally from Brisbane, Miranda currently works as an interpretation developer at London’s Natural History Museum.

Slightly translucent, legible brushstrokes bring a softness to her typically sombre palette.

‘There’s lots of pushing the paint around and wiping it back to create a sense of form and light. I love how ambiguous you can be in creating images this way,’ Miranda says.

Miranda’s new exhibition — Making Beds at MARS Gallery this Thursday  — offers glimpses into English historic house museums.

Miranda has developed her artistic style by ‘trying lots of different things and having lots of failures’ to arrive at a process she deeply enjoys and is constantly surprised by.

House museums portrayed in Making Beds include Dennis Severs’ House, Freud Museum, Leighton House, Sir John Soane’s Museum, and Charles Dickens Museum.

Miranda Hine, Freud House (office), 2024, oil on board 40.5 x 30.5cm. Courtesy of MARS and the artist.

Miranda Hine, Keats House (lemons and scallops), 2024, oil on board 40.5 x 30.5cm. Courtesy of MARS and the artist.

Miranda Hine, Kenwood House (hall), 2023, oil on board 22.8 x 15cm. Courtesy of MARS and the artist.

Miranda Hine, Leighton House (peacock room), 2024, oil on board 40.5 x 30.5cm. Courtesy of MARS and the artist.

Writer
Amelia Barnes
Photography
6th of May 2024

Miranda Hine initially studied a Bachelor of Fine Arts before moving into museum creation.

These worlds combined have inspired her new exhibition, Making Beds, which depicts intimate slivers inside English historic house museums.

Just as these scenes have been highly orchestrated to suit a public museum, Miranda deliberately composes and manipulates each setting, asking the viewer to consider what is valued.

Miranda is originally from Brisbane — an outsider viewpoint that is captured in these paintings created where she’s currently based in London.

‘While here I’ve become acutely aware of being Australian. It’s not something that people here necessarily care about, but I’ve come to appreciate just how much that context has shaped my ways of seeing,’ she says.

‘To be showing this series of works – that was painted in London and features views from London historic house museums – in Australia, feels fitting.’

The house museums portrayed include Dennis Severs’ House, Freud Museum, Leighton House, Sir John Soane’s Museum, and Charles Dickens Museum.

Miranda has developed her artistic style by ‘trying lots of different things and having lots of failures’ to arrive at a process she deeply enjoys and is constantly surprised by.

‘To me, the process is really important. It’s the fun bit,’ she explains. ‘I never know how a work will turn out when I begin.’

Her works are created using oil paints on gessoed hardboard — a base specifically selected for its ‘slipperiness’ and absorbency. Thinner is added to fluidify the paint, creating the soft, legible and slightly transparent brush strokes that characterise Miranda’s work.

‘There’s lots of pushing the paint around and wiping it back to create a sense of form and light. I love how ambiguous you can be in creating images this way,’ Miranda says.

‘I take my glasses off when I paint and my eyesight is really poor, so that stops me focusing on the detail and more on light, value, shape and colour instead.’

The work is complete when Miranda is happy with the outcome, whether that takes an hour, or several weeks spent refining.

See ‘Making Beds’ by Miranda Hine at MARS Gallery from Thursday May 9 – Saturday June 1.

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