Shelley Dyer-Gibbins fetish art:
A linocut above the rest!
MARCH COVER STORY: Shelley Dyer-Gibbins grew up in south-west England and had a career as a graphic artist in London before moving to Somerset to work as an artist and creative workshop tutor. She has won prizes and featured in prestigious exhibitions, but it was lockdown and the success of a linocut work of hers featuring stockings and heels that prompted her journey into fetish art. Today her website boasts an intriguing ‘Top Shelf ’ section devoted to kink, and she’s planning a major London exhibition for the autumn. Banner: three examples of her linocut work included in this article’s galleries
Artist and printmaker Shelly Dyer-Gibbins grew up in the south-west of England where, she says, “anything deemed different, with an ‘edge’, and that wasn’t sensible and safe” was always frowned upon.
“Even becoming a ‘normal artist’ — whatever that means — had its drawbacks,” she explains. “I found there always seemed to be a real ‘battle’ of forces between artists then and now… open calls, awards etc, general rivalry… it was exhausting.”
But since venturing into the world of fetish and kink, she has found that “rejecting the constraints of societal norms and embracing the unconventional” has been “a more liberating and fulfilling” artistic experience. “Maybe more so as a female artist trying to break away from vanilla,” she thinks.
Shelley, who worked as a graphic artist in London for many years before moving to Somerset to work both as an artist and creative workshop tutor, says she has the sense that only a scattering of female artists are pushing themselves up through the ranks of fetish art.
This, she points out, is in stark contrast to the genre’s numerous earlier male exponents, among whom she counts American artist Charles Guyette, Italian illustrator and comics artist Roberto Baldazzini and American illustrator and tattooist Patrick Conlon to name but a few.
Shelley Dyer-Gibbins feels her early artist career has “seemed relatively successful”. She won the National Open Art Print Prize in 2017, followed by these other milestones:
VAO (Visual Art Open) Exhibition & Awards 2018
National Original Print Exhibition, Bankside Gallery, London 2019
Upfest Street Art Festival, Bristol 2022
EVAC (East Village Art Collection), NYC, USA 2022
Society of Women Artists, Mall Galleries, London, 2022 & 2023
Erotic Art London Exhibition, The Bargehouse, OXO Tower 2023 & publication.
But despite all this, she felt there was always something missing: “Lockdown gave me a huge shift of direction with an artwork called Night In — a linocut featuring heels and stockings that sold well within the mainstream, as staying in was the new ‘going out’.
“Requests came flooding in for more artwork along these lines, as people were becoming more open to exploring diverse and non-traditional forms of art. And that,” she says, “is where my journey into fetish began.”
Proposed by the artist for London later this year is a three-woman fetish art exhibition featuring Shelley, Michelle Mildenhall and A N Other to be announced. Currently, the two are looking for a third artist to fill that vacancy.
The unifying theme of the exhibition will be three women who all create their fetish art in less conventional media. Shelley specialises in traditional linocut mixed with spray paint etc, while Michelle creates pop art portraits from blocks of colour cut from sheet latex (as used for clothing).
So artist number three will need to be able to offer some equally unconventional approach. If any further clarification is still needed: people who think ‘fetish art’ means doing a “straight pencil sketch from a fetish photograph” need not apply!
But anyone with a less common approach, who thinks their work could sit well alongside that of Mildenhall and Dyer-Gibbins, is welcome to get in touch. Suitable candidates would also have to be able to help the other two “facilitate part of the show at some point over the week of the show”.
Shelley reveals that, to run alongside the exhibition, she is currently working on “a small publication” called The Little Book of Naughty. And, she adds, if approached by more than one artist of the right calibre, she wouldn’t rule out expanding the exhibition beyond the current three-woman limit.
Asked to summarise what the future as an artist might hold for her, Shelley is philosophical. “I’m on a journey,” she says, “and who knows where it will end up. But I’m here for the ride and it’s certainly not vanilla!”
Artworks and commissions are both available from Shelley Dyer-Gibbins. Reach her via her website contact page (be sure to check out her Top Shelf page too!), or drop her a DM via Instagram — links to both below.
Tags: Artists, Fetish Art, Mixed Media