Kate Scrivener’s artworks take us on a journey between the micro and the macro. She paints tiny, microscopic texts, which refer to extraordinary, cataclysmic, huge events. In Some Billions of Years of This, images of a Supernova – a fast and destructively violent dying star – are constructed through minute narratives transcribed from newspaper cuttings of the 1969 moon landings. Scrivener is interested in the extreme limits of human endeavour and the powerful potential of nature. Recent gouaches of twigs found in the street, and her cat’s ears, make the familiar become unfamiliar; the twigs seem as if they could have travelled here from another galaxy.