Light floods through the huge plate-glass windows of the remarkable theatre foyer, an ideal setting for Lee-Anne Hampson's colourful and provocative exhibition informed by all her travels.

Downstairs one enters a sea-green world. Her pictures of traditional batiks blended with sequins and western fabrics, like organza, reflect the ebb and flow of water. While swimming in the South Pacific Ocean she found herself drowning and her life force emerging "into a spirit being" in the form of a small fish returning to her homeland. This vision she then recreated in her translucent silk mural Tanuatu and in her two large evocative paintings that suggest the freedom, movement and play of light beneath the waves of Papua New Guinea. Wara Ensel or water angel' represents souls linked to constellations of the sky. In this section we are transported to the dominant culture of the sea, particularly with her delicate ceramic fish, each mounted on its own pedicle, painted in luminous, rippling shades of sea and sky.

In the upper gallery Hampson conflates the contemporary "gods of consumerism and fashion" with the rituals of the ancient Aztec people. Two ceramic figures, entitled Inside My Skin, are sewn into an outer fitted skin suggesting the skins of the sacrificial victims worn by the priests during the season of plenty. Hungry Woman, a mixed-media installation, is made up of ceramic flowers with gaping red mouths that stretch across the floor searching endlessly for food as they follow the viewer around. Hungry Woman reflects the modern female's eternal longing for sustenance while yearning to be slender. Equally worrying are the Five Heads, each identical, confirming our need for conformity with their pairs of bright blue eyes that light up at the flick of a switch. Perhaps the most telling indictment of our brave new world is the deceptively warming Comfort Blanket embroidered with bars of chocolate to feed us throughout the night.

Hampson is an innovative artist who, on the one hand, creates a disturbing vision of a world that is never satisfied and on the other a luminous evocation of island life. Humour and liveliness are here too in her wickedly funny portrait gallery of quirky dons and students at Radley College.

The show continues until May 20, daily from 11am-4pm. For information contact Judith Harris (01235 543039).