November 9 2019 - January 11 2020
An exhibition of recent work by the artist, marked by vitality, technical mastery, and color.
Read MoreAn exhibition of recent work by the artist, marked by vitality, technical mastery, and color.
Read MoreAn exhibition of the paintings of three artists - Roy Germon, Kathi Smith, and Timothy Wilson - whose expressive landscapes capture and convey place not simply as a visual experience but as an emotional one as well, inviting the viewer to draw upon his or her own memories of the indelible Maine landscape.
Read MoreCurated by Marcia Minter, this exhibition displays the Cuba-based work of photographer David Caras and the Asia-based photography of Meredith Kennedy. Although immediately recognizable as foreign, the images Caras and Kennedy capture evoke our shared humanity across cultures and the often exquisite (acute, even painful) beauty we create.
Read MoreLauded as “the greatest living American painter you’ve never heard of,” this exhibition of Harold Garde’s work focuses on his bold experimentation in Neo-Expressionism.
Read MoreHungarian-born Maine resident, Miklos Pogany, is a prolific artist with an impressive exhibition history and work in the permanent collections of many major museums.
Read MoreAn exhibition of master printer David Wolfe’s new series of portraits of both contemporaries and historical figures.
Read MoreThomas Flanagan’s hard-edged abstractions have best been described as the physical representation of sound and movement.
Read MoreAn exhibition of Hewitt's dynamic, imaginative paintings, sculpture, prints, and neon constructions. Hewitt’s connection to Lewiston, ME is the inspiration for the exhibition's title, which highlights the influence of the mill-working community on Hewitt's work.
Read MoreIan Trask’s Strange Histories is inspired by family slideshows, bringing a largely obsolete narrative art form back to life. By combining found 35mm slide photography, analog collage, and assemblage sculpture, Trask creates imaginative double-exposures that transcend the boundaries of time and experience.
Read MoreA five decade retrospective of the work of Lucile 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 MoreA fun, fabulous, and thought-provoking meditation on the role fashion plays in shaping and expressing identity. This exhibition features artists Crystal Cawley, Fred Lynch, Lesia Sochor, and Gin Stone with a special appearance by Andy Warhol.
Read MoreCurated by Bruce Brown, the exhibition showcases the work of the faculty teaching photography in our local universities. To see what’s next in fine art photography, look to those teaching the next generation of photographers.
Read MoreSean Alonzo Harris’ stunning Kennedy Park series portrays residents of Portland’s East Bayside neighborhood, Cove Street Arts’ home. Harris’ authentic connection to his subjects is undeniable in his work.
Read MoreTom Paiement’s masterpiece Entropy is based upon the scientific maxim that order inevitably yields to disorder. As disorder increases, so does entropy. Yet, it is the increase of entropy that leads to transformation in the world. Paiement’s triptych explores this seeming paradox with both vitality and vulnerability.
Read MoreA collection of Tom Hall’s soulful, haunting paintings of the Maine landscape.
Read MoreWith Index, Witman records what once was the flora of a small patch of intertidal marsh of the St. George River where she lives and works. Reminiscent of herbarium records, the flora are memorialized as climate change alters the ecosystem.
Read MoreMichel Droge’s current body of work is inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphoses and draws parallels from this epic poem to the present day cultural and ecological exploitation of environmental and social ecosystems.
Read MoreA photography exhibition curated by Bruce Brown featuring 10 photographers spanning the entire coast of Maine.
Read More