Laura Burke’s still lifes unfold with a quiet sense of narrative, their objects arranged less as a formal exercise than as a suggestion of something just outside the frame. A bowl of fruit, a cluster of ceramics, a stray leaf—each element is both deliberately placed and vaguely unsettled, as if caught in the process of becoming something else. Here, the familiar language of the still life brushes against the vastness of the landscape, not as a contrast but as an inevitability. A table is also a horizon; a vase holds not just flowers, but the suggestion of weather.
These limited-edition prints preserve the layered compositions and atmospheric richness of Burke’s originals, inviting a second, closer look. The scenes are generous with detail but never insistent—open-ended arrangements that reward attention without demanding it.



