member archive

Blog Archives

Cheryl Dyment

alt
Cheryl Dyment
Valley Farm Studio
Web Site
(978)777-1345

Email







If you are Cheryl Dyment you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Cheryl Dyment

Linda Kelly

Linda Kelly
Studio49
Web Site
(978)290-0213

Email






Artist and art teacher. I have taught children and young adult programs in Rockport public schools, through Art Harbor and privately in my studio (Studio49) for the past 10 years. Currently teaching after school and homeschool art classes to elementary and middle school aged students.
My own exhibits include painting, portraits, and mixed media works in Chicago and New York City, Brooklyn, San Francisco, Atlanta, and closer to home- Lynn and Salem, Gloucester and Rockport.


If you are Linda Kelly you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Linda Kelly

Mary F Hayes

alt
Mary Forte Hayes
Mary F Hayes Fine Art
Web Site
(617)901-3360

Email






Mary lives in Rockport and often paints by the sea. Spending extended time on a sailboat each summer provides quiet time for reflection as well as inspiration for many of her paintings. Mary spends part of the year in California and enjoys capturing breathtaking coastal and desert vistas. Mary is a former French teacher, high school principal and college instructor who presently coaches educational leaders. In addition to painting, she loves cooking and spending time with her grandchildren.


If you are Mary Forte Hayes you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Mary F Hayes

Christy S Park

alt
Christy Park
Christy Park
Web Site
(978)282-4930

Email



http://christyspark.blogspot.com


I studied painting at the Art Students’ League in New York City, and earned an MFA in film/printmaking at the Ohio State University. I worked mostly with film and was drawn to the montage of frames and sound which for me were a natural extension of my primary medium, collage. My work has been exhibited nationally, and I was one of the founders of the 55 Mercer St. Gallery in NY. I am now professor emerita at the Massachusetts College of Art, and I have written on video art.

Experiences have always been subliminal guidelines for my work (as I believe they are for many artists) I am inspired mostly by the stories which reflect a lifetime of reading, and the stories that I recreate in visual form are often shaped by places that I have visited, remember, or have read about. Social issues are currently at the forefront of my work – war in particular.
I am interested the role that conflict has played in human history, and I am inspired by this quote from Isaiah:

“They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. [Isaiah 2:4]”

My recent work follows two strands: images that evoke war, and weapons transformed into plowshares that are overlaid with their original purposes.


If you are Christy Park you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Christy S Park

Stephan Gersh

Stephen Gersh
Stephen Gersh Photography
Web Site
(978)768-7822

Email



http://www.stephangershmetalsculpture.com


• Included in 65 group exhibitions, 15 one man shows
• Photographs are in the collections of 12 museums
• Co-Founder & Director, The Essex Photographic Workshop
• Director, Goddard College Masters Program in Photography
• Consultant Polaroid Corporation
• Included in 75 group exhibitions, 20 one man shows
• Director, New England School of Photography
• Director, Photographic Education at Project, Inc.
• Instructor, Endicott Junior College & Mass. College of Art
• Instructor, With Minor White in the graduate program in photography , MIT
• Director, Lightworks, Inc, Essex
• Technical Advisor, WGBH “Photo Show”
• Photographic Artist in the Polaroid Print Collection
• Co-President, Helios Studio, Cambridge
• Assistant to Ansel Adams, Carmel, CA
• Attended Syracuse University with studies in philosophy, political science,sociology, theatre, anthropology and art history


If you are Stephen Gersh you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Stephan Gersh

John Bassett

alt
John Bassett
John Bassett glass
Web Site
(617)739-1160

Email






ARTIST STATEMENT

I was a kid who drew and painted. My uncle, Richard Bassett was a painter. I loved my uncle and loved watching him work and the smell of oil paint in his studio. I also loved Joseph LeBeau who gardened for my grandmother, who lived in Northampton, Ma. He just enjoyed making things and made wonderful play machines out of discarded lumber, used nails, popsicle sticks, and old paint. He gave these toys, some very big, to all the neighborhood kids.

I graduated from Harvard College and spent three years in the architecture program at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Working as a draftsman soon convinced me to do something else. I worked as a carpenter and builder, mostly self employed, until I retired.

I first thought of working with glass as I looked out a window in a friend’s apartment on west 8th Street in Manhattan. I saw the street. The pavement was full of crushed bits of glass that sparkled in the sun. It was paved not with gold, but with beauty. And what I saw as beautiful was bits of broken bottles.

My art is a response to the world around me and to my awareness of its change during my life. I’m surrounded by affluence and by things. New things in big stores, now almost empty. And discarded old things, many still usable, in the streets. It was so different when I was a child during World War II. Materials were scarce and not wasted. Drinks came in glass bottles that were often re-used. We put the empty milk bottles out and the milk man picked them up. Aluminum was used for weapons and machines, not cans. Scrap metal was saved and collected for the war effort. We had enough food, but there were some things one couldn’t get. Used cooking fat was saved for the war effort. We cleaned our plates. Little was thrown away.

So I grew up at a very different time. We’ve become wasteful. This change is largely a positive change for me. I’m a thrifty person, used to working with my hands, and now surrounded by all sorts of re-usable waste. And I remember Joseph LeBeau. Of course I use this stuff. Of course I make things of recycled materials.


If you are John Bassett you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on John Bassett

Frances Osten

alt
Fran Osten
Goose Cove Looms
Web Site
(781)608-2121

Email






Inspired by the ever changing colors of the New England landscape and the ocean cove outside my Gloucester studio, I create textiles with a sense of movement and flow in the weave as well as the garment itself. My pieces drape well and the same piece can be worn casually with jeans or be worn to accent dress clothes for more formal occasions.

Working with many yarns I dye myself allows a flow of color that enlivens my pieces, I create shawls, scarves and ponchos, often augmented with beads. ribbon or unusual buttons.

In addition to wearable art, I also weave table runners, baby blankets and wedding canopies (chuppahs). I generally show my work with two fellow weavers as the Danforth Weavers. For information about currently available work for sale or to commission a piece, please contact me.


If you are Fran Osten you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Frances Osten

Susan Oleksiw

alt
Susan Oleksiw
Susan Oleksiw
Web Site
(978)922-6693

Email



http://www.susansblogbits.blogspot.com


Susan Oleksiw is the author of two mystery series, the first featuring Chief of Police Joe Silva and the second featuring Anita Ray, an Indian American photographer living in India. Susan has been writing and publishing short fiction, novels, reviews, essays, and articles since the 1960s. She was co-founder of Level Best Books, which publishes an annual anthology of crime fiction, and co-founder and editor of The Larcom Press, which published The Larcom Review and several mystery novels.

More recently Susan has exhibited her photos of India and parts of the Northwest.


If you are Susan Oleksiw you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Susan Oleksiw

Lynn Swigart

Lynn S. Swigart
Swigart Studio
Web Site
(978)283-2418

Email







If you are Lynn S. Swigart you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Lynn Swigart

Wendy D Morgan

alt
Wendy Morgan
Seaside Ceramics & Photo Cards
Web Site
(978)282-4886

Email



http://wendy-seasideceramics.blogspot.com


Studio Art, History of Art, Photography teacher- ten years

Free-lance photographer-12 years


If you are Wendy Morgan you can edit this post

Share
Comments Off on Wendy D Morgan