The Pembrokeshire Summer is celebrated in a changing show of new paintings and original prints by selected established artists from across Wales at the White Lion Street Gallery in Tenby, starting on Friday and continuing to the end of August. Subtle, skilful, colourful, humorous, accurate, imaginative and exciting - there is something to suit all tastes.

Landscape including sea, town and countryside of Pembrokeshire and other parts of Wales, is well represented both in realistic and more abstracted styles. Jon Houser’s soft focus oil ‘en plein air’ paintings contrast with the finely detailed watercolours of David Bellamy (the renowned painter, not the bearded one), the subtle paintings of Peter Cronin from the Vale of Glamorgan and the pointillist oils of Tenby artist Guy Manning.

Horses, in flighty, interested and listening attitudes as well as some active musicians come from the studio of Ceredigion artist Andie Clay, a happy dog gambols on Tina Lewis’s beach and sheep are herded down a lane. Other creatures appear in the context of seaside or farm. The steelworks of Port Talbot and the docks of Swansea are represented in the skilful batiks of Rhona Tooze, trees feature in Debbie Dunbar’s work and the sea, harbours and coastal towns are the subjects of Martyn Vaughan Jones and Elaine Graham.

Humorous characters, seeking the sun and daring to swim, are posed by Beatrice Williams and the Swansea printmakers, Sally Hands and Judith Stroud, have incised designs of seaside imagery and back yards. Calm seas, choppy waters, estuarine mud and sandy coves are the subjects of several artists from Pembrokeshire.

In other parts of the gallery throughout the Summer there will be a large selection of work from the 60 or so regular gallery artists, including painters Penelope Timmis, Elizabeth Haines, Lyndon Thomas, Sian McGill, Andrew Douglas Forbes, Maggie Brown, Graham Hadlow, Eden Evans, Dai David, Dorian Spencer Davis, Bob Grimson and Bert Evans; printmakers Hilary Paynter, Trevor Haddrell, Sheila Stafford, Ann Lewis and David Beattie as well as a large collection of ceramics and Neil Croucher’s work in glass.

The exhibition will continue until August 28. All work is for sale and may be taken immediately. Interest free credit is available. As new work comes in, it will be added to the show. Entry is free and browsers are always welcome

The White Lion Street Gallery in Tenby, near the Premier Inn, is open from 10 am until 5 pm every day except for Wednesday. For further information, telephone 01834-843375 and see everything on the gallery website www.artmatters.org.uk