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From the archives: Bryony Rose Jennings

Written by Angela Truscott | Jan 12 2026
Marian Jazmik is a UK-based textile artist known for her inventive mixed media sculptures inspired by nature’s quiet details. In this conversation, Marion shares how retirement became her creative beginning, why texture speaks louder than colour, and how found objects and experimental play underpin her captivating practice.

Show Notes

Takeaways from this episode

  • Fabric carries more than texture – it carries time.
    Bryony’s sculptures begin not with a concept, but with the cloth itself. Pre-loved, pre-worn and full of past lives, each fragment guides her toward the creature it’s meant to become.

  • Making is an act of listening.

    Bryony doesn’t force her creatures into being – she coaxes them to life. Eyes, limbs, gestures and expressions evolve slowly, revealing personality when the moment is right.

  • Creativity is a conversation with memory.
    From childhood influences to inherited fabrics and a life-size donkey named Flossie, Bryony’s work honours the unseen threads that stitch together life, loss and legacy.

  • Teaching is a two-way street.

    As a tutor, Bryony encourages students through the vulnerable "duck phase" of their making process – that uncertain early stage where nothing looks quite right yet. She reminds us to “embrace the fray” and trust that beauty can emerge from the imperfect.

  • You don’t have to stay one thing.

    Whether as jeweller, sculptor, mother or mentor, Bryony’s path reflects a creative life in flux – open to evolution, rooted in craft, and rich with soulful connection.

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Explore the artwork from this episode below

During the live interview, we shared some images of Bryony’s artwork. Since you’re listening to the podcast version, we’ve made these images available for you below.