Lone Walks
‘Lone Walks’ is an original wood engraving print from a limited edition of 100. Printed on soft white Somerset Book paper using traditional oil based ink.
This print was inspired by walks along my local beaches in Cornwall. I love seeing the dramatic contrast between the dark cliffs and the white sandy beaches. I’m always drawn to the image of this solitary figure exploring the landscape by themself, alone but not lonely, with the vast landscape spreading out in front of them.
Paper size: 7 × 7 inches (18 × 18 cm)
Image size: 4 × 4 inches (10.5 × 10.5 cm)
*This print comes unframed
About Jay
Jay Caskie’s work sits quietly at the meeting point of memory and place — a meditation on landscape as both refuge and mirror. Drawing from the vast, expansive terrains of his Canadian upbringing and the elemental, shifting coastline of Cornwall where he now resides, Caskie creates intricately detailed woodblock prints that feel at once deeply personal and universally resonant.
There is a stillness within his compositions — solitary houses, lone figures, vast horizons — that invites the viewer inward. These are not just depictions of land, but emotional terrains; spaces that hold solitude without loneliness, and distance without disconnection. In Caskie’s hands, landscape becomes a language through which we consider home, belonging, and our quiet, often unspoken relationship with the natural world and each other.
His process is one of patience and precision. Beginning with a sketch — drawn either from life or memory — each image is meticulously carved into wood, a slow act of translation from thought to form. Ink is then rolled across the surface, and paper carefully pressed to receive the image, either by hand or through a traditional press. The result is a work that carries the trace of its making — tactile, deliberate, and deeply human.
Printed in limited editions, each piece is individually signed and numbered, reinforcing a sense of rarity and intention. Nothing is rushed; nothing is repeated beyond its allotted run. There is integrity in this restraint.
Working from his studio at Krowji in Redruth, and shaped by days spent moving through Cornwall’s beaches and tides, Caskie’s practice remains grounded in observation, rhythm, and return — an ongoing exploration of what it means to find oneself within a landscape, and perhaps, to belong to it.












