Textile artist Ruth Smith has used her home, garden and home county of Oxfordshire as the inspiration for the series of weavings that comprise this exhibition (until December 16). Ruth works mainly in silk, dyeing her own silks to create colours ranging from the vibrant to the subtle. She is never sure what colour each dyeing will bring, and the surprise adds to her enjoyment of the artistic journey involved in the creation of each piece.

On show are three series of works. Each is based on a different warp, and pursues a different theme and colour scheme. The first uses pinks and oranges delicately woven into linear patterns, that combine in a way that complements rather than competes, serving to create intricate complex strands of colour juxtaposed with soft striated patterns successfully complicated and disrupted by a variety of different weaves.

The second draws on her own garden, creating a sea of gentle colours that capture the pastel planting of a cottage garden in summer. Waves of colours, inspired by buttercups, marigolds and cornflowers, among others, melt together to provide a delightful series of tranquil images. The third is also drawn from the natural world. But here the colours and patterns are bolder, and inspired by the Oxford University Botanic Garden, the butterfly collection in the Museum of Natural History and London's Kew Gardens. Images and colours derived from butterfly wings are translated and superimposed on a complex weft with pleating and embroidery adding texture and depth, and dominated by turquoise and azure, tropical greens and flaming reds.

Smith's consummate technical expertise and understanding of her materials combined with the silks and colours have resulted in wonderful textile pieces, sadly not displayed to full effect in this exhibition. They all do need to be liberated from the straightjacket of being shown under glass.

This is a delightful and understated exhibition, and it is Ruth's first. She intends to move on to working on larger, more sculptural pieces, and one looks forward to seeing how she will develop and extend her range in the future.