At London’s Sarah Myerscough Gallery, wood artist Wycliffe Stutchbury transports us to the countryside by way of his vast pictorial wall panels that evoke locales from the East Anglian Fens to the South Downs, where he spent his earliest days. Using materials such as discarded barn cladding and felled holly, the works are an exploration of landscape – ‘an observation of its folds and contours, its valleys, peaks and ridges’, as the artist says.