August 11 - September 24, 2022
This exhibition of the photography of Jim Nickelson serves as a record of our irrevocably changing natural world.
Read MoreThis exhibition of the photography of Jim Nickelson serves as a record of our irrevocably changing natural world.
Read MoreCurated by Vincent Maxime Daudin, this portraiture exhibition focuses on the emotional charge inherent in the figure, conveyed by mask-free and genuinely expressive faces.
Read MoreOur first artist-in-residence exhibition featuring the stunning work of Roy Germon created in one of the gallery’s studios.
Read MoreCurated by Lissa Hunter, the exhibition features the work of ten artists that explores the importance of line in visual communication.
Read MoreCurated by Bruce Brown and featuring photography faculty from Maine Media Workshops + College, this exhibition is the third and final installment of our “Faculty Photographers” series.
Read MoreAn exhibition of nature-inspired paintings on canvas, paper, and aluminum by Bernd Haussmann
Read MoreAn exhibition of deep sea-inspired oil paintings and graphites by Michel Droge
Curated by Bruce Brown, the exhibition showcases the work of Don Peterson, Caroline Savage, and John Tiedje.
Read MoreAn exhibition featuring feminist-based paintings, drawings and collages by Colleen Kiely and Margaret Nomentana, proudly presented as part of our Women’s History Month programming.
Read MoreSusan Webster’s Wait, What?! is a series of small, detailed drawings responding to feminist issues through unconscious imagery, proudly presented as part of our Women’s History Month programming.
Read MoreArtist and cancer survivor Michael Torlen’s contemplations on love and loss, joy and sadness, beginnings and endings, sex and death.
Read MoreCurated by Bruce Brown, the exhibition showcases the work of the faculty teaching photography in our local colleges and universities.
Read MorePaintings by Jim Flahaven and sculpture by Amy Wilton
Read MoreAs the name suggests, this exhibition, curated by Bruce Brown, celebrates birds through the lenses of nineteen Maine photographers.
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