There is something uniquely compelling about art by the sea. The shifting light, the salt air, the quiet after a busy beach day, and the endless horizon all seem to sharpen the way we see colour, texture, and form.
At The Lane, the seaside is not just a setting; it is a mood that runs through much of the gallery's work.
For coastal homes, beach houses, and interiors that want to echo the calm and energy of the shoreline, artworks inspired by the sea can create a powerful sense of place. The Lane's collection shows how artists interpret the coast in very different ways: through silvery light, layered surfaces, silhouettes, glass, and tactile materials.
The coast as subject
Eline de Jonge’s Shadows on Sand series captures the coast of Cadaquès in Northern Spain, where people on the beach become dark silhouettes against warm light and water. The works are painted on raw linen and layered with Mediterranean sky tones and seawater-inspired colour before being softened by pasty white oil paint, creating a delicate balance between visibility and disappearance. Titles such as Shadows on Sand - Beach Panorama, Kites’ Up, Surf’s Up, and Kitesurfers feel immediately connected to the rhythm of seaside life. They do not simply depict the beach; they translate the feeling of being there, where movement, glare, and atmosphere are constantly changing.
Texture and tide
The Lane’s wider collection shows that seaside art does not have to be literal to feel coastal. Marike Andeweg’s resin and textile works, for example, bring a luminous, layered softness that echoes sea glass, shells, and weathered surfaces, while Natalie Pleis’s wood-based mixed media pieces feel grounded and elemental, like cliff face, stone, and tide-worn terrain.
James Hawke’s Coast I and Container II offer another perspective, with large-scale oil on linen works that feel expansive and contemporary. Their scale and tonal strength suit interiors that want something atmospheric rather than decorative, making them especially effective in light-filled spaces near the water.
Why seaside art works
Art connected to the sea often succeeds because it mirrors the experience of coastal living: open, changing, and quietly immersive. Blues, whites, sandy neutrals, and muted earth tones can calm a room, while textured surfaces add depth that responds beautifully to natural daylight.
That is part of the appeal for collectors and interior designers alike. A seaside artwork can anchor a room without overwhelming it, bringing in the memory of summer, travel, and airiness while still remaining sophisticated and contemporary.
surface and salt
Lynn Savarese’s photography adds a quiet, reflective layer to the idea of art at the seaside. Her images often feel rooted in atmosphere and subtle detail, capturing a sense of calm, materiality, and presence that suits coastal interiors beautifully. Rather than depicting the sea literally, her work evokes its mood through light, texture, and composition, creating a gentle visual depth that shifts with the natural light around it. That makes her photography especially effective in seaside settings, where art needs to feel elegant, understated, and in tune with its environment
Collecting for coastal interiors
When choosing art for a seaside home, consider works that shift with the light rather than compete with it. Pieces on raw linen, glass, wood, textile, or layered mixed media are especially effective because they pick up the atmosphere of the room and echo coastal materials in subtle ways.
Art at the seaside is at its best when it captures more than a view. It captures the feeling of standing at the edge of things: light on water, movement in the distance, and the quiet confidence of a place shaped by nature. That is what makes these works so well suited to coastal living, and so memorable within The Lane’s collection.