A POPULAR local artist is exhibiting her artwork at the Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust - the same hospital where she was treated for cancer. 

Phil Batty, from Atworth, in Wiltshire, was diagnosed with stage three malignant melanoma in 2019 and had treatment at the RUH throughout 2020. She has since been given the all-clear but continues to attend the hospital for scans and check-ups. 

Phil started painting in 2018 but it was during her cancer treatment that she really embraced the artistic life, painting and creating from her kitchen at home. 

Her exhibition, Still Alive, initially exhibited at Corsham Gallery, is being shown at the RUH by Art at the Heart, the RUH’s in-house art and design team. It follows another successful exhibition from Phil that was shown during the Peacock Art Trail in Corsham last year. 

Phil Batty, from Atworth in Wiltshire, with her artwork
Phil Batty, from Atworth in Wiltshire, with her artwork (RUH)

Still Alive is a collection of mixed media artwork, inspired by her cancer journey. Phil said: “I first started doing art because it makes me feel alive, it lights me up.

“Still Alive is all about celebrating life and the fact that I’m still here, making the art that I love so much. 

“During my cancer treatment art was something that always made me happy and gave me that creative focus.

“I’m delighted that part of the exhibition is now on show at the RUH and hope it’s enjoyed by those who see it.” 

Phil creates floral pieces as well as still life and collages, printing paper that she then incorporates into her work. Some of her pieces have poems that resonate with her included within them

“When I was diagnosed with cancer it was during lockdown, so it was a very uncertain time for everyone,” said Phil,” she added.

Phil started her career as a health visitor working in the NHS until 2015, before retraining as a teacher in the Alexander technique, which teaches improved posture and movement, to rid herself of chronic back pain. 

As well as continuing to exhibit around the local area, she is looking at creating a course that mixes art with the Alexander technique, to help artists with musculoskeletal problems to continue to do the work they love. You can find the Still Alive exhibition in the corridor outside the Friends of the RUH Café (B18). 

All artwork is for sale with one third of the proceeds going to the RUH. You can follow Phil on Instagram @batty.phil and Art at the Heart @artatheartruh