Black and white photograph of an elderly woman outside holding a walking stick.
Exhibitions

A Life Outside: Hope Bourne on Exmoor

Dis­cov­er the extra­or­di­nary cre­ative out­put of nature writer and artist Hope Bourne in this new appraisal of her work on dis­play at Somerset.

Dates
27/09/25 – 10/01/26
Region
Somerset
Opening Times
Sun–Mon, Closed
Tue–Sat, 10:00 – 17:00
Price
FREE with Museum Unlimited/normal admission applies Adult: £10.00 Concessions: £8.00 Child (under 5): FREE Child (aged 5-17) £4.75

Bringing together many never before seen artworks, writings and personal belongings, A Life Outside: Hope Bourne on Exmoor offers insight into a singular voice whose reflections on nature, rural life and environmental sustainability remain profoundly relevant today.

Hope Bourne (1918–2010) was a writer and artist who spent almost sixty years recording the landscape, wildlife, history and changing rural traditions of Exmoor. Fiercely creative and resolutely independent, she led a self-reliant life that gave her the freedom to write, draw and paint.

Over the course of her life, Bourne produced thousands of drawings and paintings, authored books and pamphlets, illustrated works, wrote newspaper columns, and kept a daily journal.

The exhibition draws on collections within the Exmoor Society archives including Hope Bourne’s artworks, writing, personal items and new research by writer and Guardian Country Diarist Sara Hudston, whose book A Life Outside: Hope Bourne on Exmoor will be published in September 2026 by the Exmoor Society.
The exhibition is co-curated by Kate Best and Sara Hudston, for the South West Heritage Trust.

Header image: Hope Bourne, 8 August, 2001 aged 82. Photographed by Mark J Rattenbury © Mark J Rattenbury (detail).

Black and white photograph of an elderly woman outside holding a walking stick.
CREDIT
Disciplines
Drawing Painting Writing