For Sale

 How to support

  • All of my available pieces will be listed below with their prices, size and materials. If you are interested in a piece, want to book a viewing, would like more images, or have any other questions, please complete the form at the bottom of this page or contact me directly on meganwillow.art@gmail.com

  • As all of these pieces contain natural materials meaning they could alter a little over time. The images of them may also show slight variations of colour because of this. This is the beauty of working with the natural world, as these pieces of art have their own cycles. Email me at meganwillow.art@gmail.com for any concerns or questions.

  • This needs to be arranged by you for this particular painting sale. All works will be able to be collected from Goldsmiths Campus, London, until end of January 2026. If this is not possible please contact me and we can try and arrange an alternative.

Please enquire about individual pieces in the form below

Porous, Airy Bodies

This series, Porous, Airy Bodies, consists of Hack’s research undertaken in the MA Art & Ecology program at Goldsmiths University. She uses foraged urban pigments from the trees of Northeast and Southeast London where she grew up and studied, with pigment made from particulate matter extracted from the airs. By visualising the invisible air we breathe in this way conjures an alternative atmospheric painting, one of the toxic sublime. Where bodies of human, nonhuman and sky conflate. Where breath is the ultimate exchange, interconnection and reciprocation with this breathing planet.

 

 

PM2.5: Particulate Matter , measured at 2.5µg/m3 and often made up of soot in air pollution. This is the smallest of airborne particles measured in air quality indexes, it is absorbed by bodies and causes the most harm.

We Definitely Don’t All Breathe The Same Air

Megan Willow Hack

Foraged pigments from Goldsmiths Campus: birch leaves, oak galls, chestnut, ivy, hawthorn, PM2.5- 10.3µg/m3 on canvas,

200cm x 200cm [framed], 2025, £1750

 

“We definitely don't all breathe the same air, it's a

myth. Lung disease is a poor person's disease.” –

Rosamund Adoo-Kissi-Debrah

 

Exchanges in an Urban Forest, pentaptych,

Megan Willow Hack

Epping Forest Oak Gall ink & Birch tree pigment on canvas, PM2.5- 13.5µg/m3, 2025

128cm x 548cm pentaptych, £1000

Large pieces: 128cm x 128cm, £250

Smaller pieces: 128cm x 82cm, £200

(Can be sold individually, please note reduced price reflects slight warping)

Toxic Sublime

Megan Willow Hack

Sweet chestnut dye, cliff chalk, iron, PM 2.5: 13.3µm/m³ on canvas, 28cm x 38cm, £100

 

Breathe in for 4, hold for 4, out for 4…

Megan Willow Hack

Acorn dye, gorse dye, Iron, branch, PM 2.5: 4.0µm/m³ on canvas, £150, (branch has been taken off for storage and collection, can be reattached)

A Response to Dead Ends: Alternative Carbon Afterlives

Megan Willow Hack

Oak gall dye from Epping Forest on canvas, 128x128cm, £275

 

The title A Response to Dead Ends has a dual purpose, ‘dead ends’ suggests both a path with no exit and references the urban slang of East London where your ‘ends’ is your neighbourhood/ postcode.

 

Purchase Enquiry

For sales: please include the title of the work

Please also use this form for any other questions, regarding further images of detail, materials or to book a viewing. Also note that collection will be available from Goldsmiths Campus London until the end of January 2026.

Mockup attributions here and here.