Works
  • Gala Hills Sheep Shearing, 2025 Oil on canvas 80 x 130 cm
    Gala Hills
    Sheep Shearing, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    80 x 130 cm
  • Gala Hills Harpy, 2025 Oil on canvas 41 x 80 cm
    Gala Hills
    Harpy, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    41 x 80 cm
  • Gala Hills Baying Hounds, 2025 Watercolour on cotton paper Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
    Gala Hills
    Baying Hounds, 2025
    Watercolour on cotton paper
    Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
  • Gala Hills Mirror Sky, 2025 Oil on canvas 41 x 51 cm
    Gala Hills
    Mirror Sky, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    41 x 51 cm
  • Gala Hills Sea Monster, 2025 Watercolour on cotton paper Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
    Gala Hills
    Sea Monster, 2025
    Watercolour on cotton paper
    Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
  • Gala Hills Sea Monster (part 2), 2025 Watercolour on paper Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
    Gala Hills
    Sea Monster (part 2), 2025
    Watercolour on paper
    Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
  • Gala Hills Selkie, 2025 Oil on canvas 60 x 80 cm
    Gala Hills
    Selkie, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 80 cm
  • Gala Hills Spinster’s Rock, 2025 Oil on canvas 102 x 137 cm
    Gala Hills
    Spinster’s Rock, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    102 x 137 cm
  • Gala Hills Wodewose with Raven, 2025 Watercolour on cotton paper Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
    Gala Hills
    Wodewose with Raven, 2025
    Watercolour on cotton paper
    Dimensions vary (roughly A3)
  • Gala Hills Wodewose Woman, 2025 Oil on canvas 41 x 51 cm
    Gala Hills
    Wodewose Woman, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    41 x 51 cm
Overview
In Between Beasts and Stones, Gala Hills invites viewers into a world where myth and memory blur, and the boundaries between the human, animal, and elemental dissolve. Presented within the intimate setting of a Mayfair home, the exhibition brings together Hills’ smaller watercolours on cotton paper with her larger oil paintings on canvas — a dialogue between delicacy and depth, between fluid instinct and grounded myth.
Rooted in the rugged terrain of Dartmoor, where she was home-educated amid rocks, rain, and folklore, Hills’ practice braids together historical research and anarchic imagination. Her figures — half-creature, half-woman — inhabit landscapes charged with ancient energies: shapeshifting beings, stone guardians, and spectral hybrids emerge from washes of pigment as if unearthed from the soil itself. These scenes feel both ancient and immediate, like fragments of a forgotten epic rediscovered in the subconscious.
Hills’ approach resists boundaries — between disciplines, materials, and even species. In her hands, mythology becomes a living organism; paint turns to weather; the personal merges with the collective. The resulting works feel both tender and untamed — at once playful, tragic, and deeply alive.
Installed domestically rather than institutionally, Between Beasts and Stones invites viewers to experience myth as something intimate and continuous — a presence that seeps quietly into everyday life, like a tide rising through familiar rooms.