A void of white, monochrome, spaciousness, Barbara Walker has created a white cube in artistic, two-dimensional form through her series of Vanishing Point. This white cube is also punctuated by a human presence, finely carved out of the seemingly solid mass of white using graphite. The precision of the medium, coupled with its dark tones, draws attention instantly to the figure, despite her periphery positioning at the edge of the work. Playing with ideas of vision and ways of seeing, Walker has reintroduced the black figures of Renaissance art, so often sidelined and neglected, just as they have been in historical sources. The invisible is now made visible. There is a certain sculptural tendency to the work of Walker. Due to the monochrome methods, the harsh juxtaposition of white and black, two-dimensional quickly becomes three-dimensional, giving a sense of solidity, weight and mass to the black figure here, and therefore permanence. This increases her presence, the protruding sho