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Process and Place

Artist and musician Hugo Winder-Lind​​

November, 2025

Known for his raw, textured surfaces and instinctive mark-making, Hugo Winder-Lind works with found materials, ancient imagery and the shifting relationship between humans, animals and the land. His paintings move between the archaeological and the everyday, blending prehistoric echoes with contemporary landscape. In this conversation, he reflects on his influences, his process and the themes that shape his practice as he showed us around his beautiful Brighton studio. 

Conkers:

How do you start a painting?


Hugo:

When I moved into this studio, there were stud walls all the way around, covered in this pale yellow chipboard. I took them down and kept the boards. So a lot of these paintings are literally bits of the old walls, or a door from my partner’s parents’ kitchen. You cannot buy that surface. It comes with its own story. Before that I would buy plain boards and put all the texture in myself. Now I am adding to something that already exists. It's like a sort of hunt and gather assignment.

Conkers:

You can really see the texture come thought.  Do you add anything into the paint for texture? Some of them remind me of Warhammer boards!

Hugo:

That's interesting, yeah. I was really into that stuff. Like the whole sort of like adding patina and stuff. But, It is just dust. Dust and whatever shit is on the floor. I used to be really into patina and model making, that kind of thing. I like it when the surface already feels worn in and lived with.

Conkers:

And out of interest, how planned is your painting process?


Hugo:

It’s not fixed. I mean, if i’ve been away for a long time, I just start and see what comes out. Over time I repeat certain motifs and compositions. If a composition feels strong, I will run it again and again until something snaps into place and I realise what needs to be there.

 

I kind of want to put people in a certain place. That kind of twilight time. I think that the start of the day, and the end of the day, has a very sort of– self reflective energy I guess. I mean it's not necessarily conscious.

Conkers:

Where did the sheep motif first come from in your work?
 

Hugo:

My mother in law wrote a thesis about these Neolithic rock carvings in Alta, Norway, that show the yearly cycle of reindeer. They fed people, clothed them, everything. When I came back here I started painting sheep almost without thinking about it. Herds, crowds, repeating the same form over and over. I had always painted single figures before, ones and twos. Painting lots of the same thing was a revelation.

Then in Sussex you look around and it is full of sheep. They are not being followed. We put them in a field and they keep that field. In the South Downs and the Lakes, sheep are so tied to the idea of the landscape that they stop the wilderness from coming back. It is tamed, contained countryside.

Conkers:

That links to what you say about the countryside being man made.


Hugo:

Completely. We grow up thinking rolling green hills are just “nature”, but it is a managed system. Sheep were bred and shaped to fit it. Wool, meat, pasture, all in one animal. When agriculture came here, people brought animals that could work the land for them. Man weaking nature to controlling it. We're living in the repercussions of that now. I don't know, it's just big stuff.

Conkers:

Do you feel people are more disconnected from animals and nature now?
 

Hugo:

I cannot speak for everyone, but when I talk about sheep I get very different reactions. But observing animals teaches you about yourself as an organism. That sort of looking is not really taught. No one in school says, we are going to watch animals and talk about how that makes you feel.

Conkers:

Have any places recently had a strong impact on you?
 

Hugo:

I've been going to churches a lot, the dynamics and the drama and the attention, you know, you can measure your sort of movements to feel very important at different times. You can focus your attention at different times to different places, but never feeling overwhelmed by the scale or quantity  of artistic works. Its calm.

Conkers:

It’s much less clinical than the modern sense of an art gallery.

Hugo:

Yeah, loads of different people have thought about this for a very long time. Its a tested method of how to conduct your attention to feel kind of at peace, in this space. Again, I'm drawn to all these different ways of grounding yourself in visual art. 

Conkers:

Are you a collector?
 

Hugo:

Yeah, definitely. Old wood, rocks, screws. Me and my wife pick up rocks on beaches. There is a trail of them through the house. Some are from Land’s End, some from the Northwest Highlands, things like Lewisian gneiss (Precambrian metamorphic rocks that outcrop in the northwestern part of Scotland) , which is some of the oldest rock you can find. It almost looks like steak!

Conkers:

Yeah right, It looks like black pudding! Do you collect anything else?

Hugo:

I collect clothes as well. One of my favourite things is my grandad’s old railway navy uniform. It still has the original removable buttons. 

Hugo Winder-Lind is based in Brighton, England. His available works can be found here, and his instagram here.

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