
Cyanotype on Bockingford HP paper. A4 size paper (21cm x 29.7cm).
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Oil on canvas, 31cm x 41cm
Nasturtiums are the best. The bees love them, they grow like crazy, they’re beautiful and edible with a lovely peppery taste.
This summer I bought myself a macro lens to explore my garden in miniature. As I have not been very well- suffering from ME/CFS which limits my energy- I spend a lot of time just sitting in my garden. My garden is tiny, and urban, mostly paved, with lots of things in pots.

Mixed media on canvas board, 10cm x 15cm
It was really fun to paint the textures of the stones, as well as the grass, on this tiny painting.
Posted in Paintings

Mixed media on canvas board, 10cm x 15cm
A view from my garden to this interesting building which has a sort of widow’s walk on it. The docks used to be directly behind that building, it has now been filled in and is a bit further away, though not far!
This is made with acrylic transfer, acrylic, and oil on a postcard sized canvas board.

A portrait of Karl Macrae, with his familiars Tia, Stein, and Raven. This painting was a joy to paint, and became especially poignant when Tia the staffie crossed the rainbow bridge recently.
Karl is a fabulous musician and artist, and just so happens to be my next door neighbour.
Those of you who know Joe will be excited to hear that Joe made the fiddle that Karl is playing here.
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This painting is available to buy on my webshop and I also have prints available.
Posted in Paintings

This painting is available to buy on my webshop
Posted in Paintings
Posted in Paintings

I fell ill and was diagnosed with a chronic illness called ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) in August of 2019, which affects my life to a great degree as it severely limits what I can do. The most debilitating symptom is fatigue, from which I suffer from most of the time, in varying degrees. I also get PEM or Post Exertional Malaise, which is a worsening of all symptoms after any kind of physical, mental, or emotional stress. I usually feel as though I have jet-lag and the flu all rolled into one.

Gracie is a creative young woman of my acquaintance. We discovered that we had quite a few things in common, including art, music, and a love of cats. As this painting is set in mine and Joe’s living room, it is also in some ways a portrait of us, and of course includes a portrait of our friend Wana as well as a portrait of our cat Pebbles. Gracie’s violin takes centre stage, its form echoed by Joe’s double bass in the corner. Pebbles, being a cat, couldn’t resist curling up in the empty violin case.



Posted in Paintings
Posted in Paintings
It was the last night that we were all out together before the world grew much smaller. Bassface played an absolutely amazing set, followed by Unsaeli and Harbingers, at la Belle Angele in Edinburgh’s Old Town.
This painting will be featured in the Ing Discerning Eye Exhibition 2020 from the 19th of November until the 31st of December.
Posted in Paintings

Oil on canvas, 31 x 41cm
This painting depicts the houses of Customs Wharf in Leith reflected in the Water of Leith before them.
From the ongoing Leith Shore series. The Shore is the historic dock of the port of Leith in Edinburgh, where the Water of Leith meets the Firth of Forth, and it is easily one of the most beautiful parts of the city. I am lucky enough to live a very short walk away, and I will continue this series to explore the buildings and reflections of the Shore and the Water of Leith.
Posted in Paintings
Tagged edinburgh, edinburgh art, leith, leith shore, oil on canvas

This painting is available as a limited edition print from www.EleanorBuffam.com
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This is my favourite so far of the Portobello series mini paintings.
Limited Edition prints are available from www.EleanorBuffam.com
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Tagged ArtPrints, BeachPaintings, FirthOfFirth, LimitedEditionPrints, PortobelloBeach, Seascapes

Oil on canvas
41 cm x 51 cm
Emma is an Occupational Therapist who is currently working in an Intensive Therapy Unit due to the coronavirus crisis. She says the work is both physically and mentally exhausting and she cries into her mask most shifts. Emma and I bonded over our shared love of animals, gardening, and our shared values including love and respect for the NHS.
Painted for the #portraitsfornhsheroes project


Oil on canvas
76 cm x 62 cm
Based loosely on the painting “American Gothic,” this portrait of myself and my luthier husband Joe seeks to answer important questions such as: What does it mean to be Scottish? What does it mean to be American? And what does it mean to be Gothic?
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Tagged american gothic, gothic, portrait, portrait painting, self-portrait
Posted in Paintings
Tagged beach, firth of forth, ocean, painting, portobello, sea, small painting
Posted in Paintings
Tagged firth of forth, ocean, painting, portobello, sea, small painting
Acrylic and oil on canvas.
From the series Open Windows: London architecture and architects
Wana Kejeh was born in Bermondsey, South London in 1984. Artistic from an early age, he studied architecture and worked in the architectural field for several years, before returning to art. He ran a gallery in Crystal Palace called the Weekend Gallery – so called because it was only a gallery on the weekends – during the week it was his father’s office for teaching English and business skills to recent immigrants. In 2012 I met him at my MFA degree show, where he invited me to show with him at the Weekend Gallery. The show was a success (I sold a painting!) and we struck up an enduring friendship.
Wana recently left London for Berlin, fleeing the high cost of living.
Eleanor: What is your background in architecture?
Wana: I studied at the University of Sheffield School of Architecture, based at the top of the famous Arts Tower. Back then the brutalist 60s building still had its original minimalist features. In my view there was no better place for a studio, the panoramic views from the 16th floor up were breathtaking. After my degree I worked for LRW [Leach Rhodes Walker] on various social projects including two schools in Ealing and a landscaping project at Tiverton Estate, Haringey. After a year I moved to Lloyd Northover to work on interior design projects.
E: What made you give up on architecture and return to painting?
W: I gave up on the industry when I found the reality of architectural design, especially in the current economic climate, to be restrictive and too commercially driven. I also found the profession to be too life-consuming. And I’m not the type of person to be tied down. I’ve always been an artist, since I was little. I opted to study architecture, rather than go to art school. At this point I was seventeen and my parents were the main influence in that decision. But my careers adviser and my A level art teacher advised me against it and it turns out they were right. Although I realise now that I can work with the extra skills I developed during my education and apply that to my art, so none of it was a waste.
E: You chose the Robin Hood Garden Estate as one of your favourite buildings in London. What does it mean to you?
W: Robin Hood Gardens, by Alison and Peter Smithson, is the ultimate symbol of the ‘Streets In The Sky’ concept. [Streets in the Sky was a style of 1960s-1970s British architecture. Built to replace run-down terraced housing, the new designs included inside toilets, and incorporated shops and other community facilities in the high-rise blocks.] Robin Hood Gardens is also endangered as it is due to be demolished in the coming years, likely to make way for luxury flats to increase land and property value. Cooper’s Road Estate in Bermondsey was my childhood home and it was erased when Southwark council demolished all the flats, so I am absolutely opposed to this form of social cleansing. I wanted to be captured with this building in the background before it was too late.
E: How would you like to see London develop architecturally?
W: London is a city of different sorts and impressive architecture. A lot of the interesting buildings, I find, were built during the massive building boom of the 60s and 70s, and I find concrete to be beautiful. Society and creativity used to be at the heart of design and the results are interesting and quirky. Nowadays economic conditions and budget squeezes are driving down the design quality of new builds, and it’s obvious by their appearance and the materials used. If they want to make cheap buildings why don’t they provide some of these as social housing? It is social housing that is preventing inner London from becoming homogeneous and void of that edge and creativity that made it attract people in the first place.
E: Why did you leave London for Berlin?
W: Since I first visited Berlin in 2003 I took an interest in its scene and its urban and natural landscape. The more I visited, the more friends I made and after a time it took my soul. I decided to take the leap when living in London as an artist became too unsustainable. In terms of architecture Berlin is not as attractive as London, but the stories behind the building styles and patterns have far more depth, particularly concerning the history of East and West Berlin. It is a city where you can be flexible and not worry about class or status. Everyone’s in the same boat, we are all refugees in one form or another, because we are all escaping something… Right now I’m painting in my large bedroom but eventually I’d like to occupy empty spaces and bring them into creative uses.
Posted in Paintings
Tagged london architecture, london art, portrait, robin hood gardens

30.5 x 40.5 cm
Oil on canvas
Posted in Paintings

41 x 51 cm
Oil on canvas
Posted in Paintings

30.5 x 40.5 cm
Oil on canvas

30.5 x 40.5 cm
Oil on canvas
Posted in Paintings