Location along the coastal walk from Birsay to Costa.

Laura Drever is an Orcadian artist whose work arises from a profound engagement with her native landscape, experienced through the act of walking, looking and remembering. Born in Kirkwall, she studied Drawing and Painting at Edinburgh College of Art, graduating in 2003 with First Class Honours. For more than two decades, she has explored Orkney’s shifting light, hills, and coastline, developing an intimate understanding of the islands’ rhythms and their continually changing atmosphere. Her practice begins outdoors, where she spends long periods walking and observing the terrain, the movement of weather, colour and the flight of birds. These experiences are then recalled and reimagined in the studio. Drever rarely works from direct sketches or photographs, preferring to translate memory and sensation into paint through a process that is as meditative as it is physical. Layers of colour are applied and reworked, sometimes veiled and sometimes allowed to gleam through the surface, creating a sense of depth, movement and time within the work. Drever’s paintings are not straightforward depictions of place but reinterpretations that balance recognition and abstraction. Her compositions distil the essence of Orkney’s landscape into fields of tone, rhythm and shifting light. The white of the canvas often plays an active role, suggesting air and distance while inviting the viewer to complete the image through their own perception. The result is work that conveys both the solidity and transience of the northern environment. Many of her titles draw on Orcadian dialect and Norse-derived place names, which anchor her paintings in a strong sense of locality while also introducing an element of poetry and layered meaning. Language and landscape remain intertwined.