Roy Germon’s landscapes convey a peaceful mood and the essence of a beautiful natural landscape. His paintings are a celebration of color and texture.
Read MoreKathi Smith’s lush, expressionistic paintings are known for their loose, confident brush strokes, and their complex and sophisticated interplay of textures, gestural marks, and rich, abundant color.
Read MoreFrom frenetic Asian city streets to quiet villages, Portland-based photographer Meredith Kennedy captures a beauty of foreign cultures that transcends national boundaries.
Read MorePortland-based photographer David Caras has been traveling to Cuba for almost two decades, capturing exquisite images of everyday life set in decaying colonial grandeur.
Read MoreHungarian-born Maine resident, Miklos Pogany was a master of multiple media, creating vivid works based on nature and the built environment, exploring and pushing the parameters of each medium.
Read MoreWith a remarkably accomplished career spanning seven decades, Harold Garde has made a significant, if often under-recognized contribution to Post-War American art.
Read MoreUltimately, I make pictures I want to see.
Read MoreDavid Wolfe is a master printer whose woodcuts, prints and handmade books are in the collections of Bates College Museum of Art, Bowdoin College Museum of Art Special Collections and the Portland Museum of Art, as well as numerous private collections.
Read MoreMichel Droge is a painter, printmaker and educator whose work engages with the environment and the human condition in an era of uncertainty.
Read MoreDM Witman works with photographic media to explore our relationship to the natural world, our place in the universe, and our responsibly to this earth and those who inhabit it, in the process creating captivating, exquisite pieces of visual art.
Read MoreIn unmistakable fashion, Tom Hall captures the rugged, haunting beauty of the Maine landscape. Whether pristine or impacted by human hands, Hall emotionally conveys the true spirit of the place depicted.
Read MoreTom Paiement explores his artistic curiosity with backgrounds in mechanical engineering and music.
Read MoreSean Alonzo Harris’ work is marked by a fine art sensibility and an emphasis on environmental portraits. An authentic connection to his subjects movingly and beautifully shines through in his work.
Read MoreIan Trask, a scientist-turned-artist, creates from things that are either discarded or donated in the deliberate effort to let community and access dictate the direction of his work. His work has been exhibited across the country, including, in Maine, at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art.
Read MoreCrystal Cawley’s work combines her interests in the form and history of clothing and the possibilities of paper and fabric sculpture with traditional handiwork like embroidery, spinning, and letter press spinning. Starting with something tangible, such as a box of old greeting cards or puzzle pieces, Cawley incorporates the visual history of the discarded objects into something beautiful and new.
Read MoreLucile Evans (1894-1993), a fearless, emotionally complex, and extremely talented painter and printmaker who achieved an impressive career despite the marginalization and constraints faced by female artists of her generation.
Read MoreJeremy Barnard has been primarily a practitioner of black and white photography for the past fifty plus years. Artist/writer David Raymond wrote in Art New England that Barnard's photographs “not only convey a sense of place, but a sense of time transcending place,...his work is poetic in unexpected ways.”
Read MoreJennifer Steen Booher lives on Mount Desert Island. In her “Coast Walk” series, she either attempts to document the flora and fauna she encounters or to communicate as directly as possible the experience of being in a particular place.
Read MoreKnown for expanding traditional notions of the photographic medium, Caleb Charland’s creative process is rooted in scientific inquiry, often employing multi-layered steps and experiments to create stunning images.
Read MoreGifford Ewing has captured American landscapes from east to west, mostly in Maine and the Rocky Mountain region. Each location displays what Ewing calls the artistic forms created by a landscape: the texture of the land, and the tones and interplay of light in pristine environments. Through his lens, these images become peaceful, mysterious, and evocative.
Read More