As I’ve mentioned here before, I recently painted a Merdonna and Child for an auction to raise money for Penobscot East Resource Center. You can see my buoy here.
When you’re done leafing through these, you can see all the buoys here. (And I hope you will consider bidding on them to raise money for this organization, which you can also do by emailing the director.) There are more than 60 buoys altogether, and they are very fine work indeed. These were selected under no greater organizing principle than that I liked them. But you may find others you like much better. If so, would you let me know?
Paula Dougherty’s “Seabirds”
Julie Reed’s “Dressed to Krill”
Jean C. Burdo’s “Seaside Village”
I don’t usually respond to folk art, but this is awfully well-executed, whimsical, and curiously true to what a Maine seaside village looks like. |
Mary Ellen Kelleher’s “Zinnias & Bugs”
“Oh, buoy! Is there anything better than a day in the garden,” it asks. Great flowers and a luscious blue sky…. and the painter is from Rockland. |
Audrey Yankielun’s “Number 2”
Jill Hoy’s “Dancing Tree”
No mystery to this: it looks like a Tom Thompson or Group of Seven tree, so of course I like it. Hoy operates a gallery in Stonington, and I think I’d like to wander up to see it on one of these trips. |
Persis Clayton Weirs’ “Torrey Pond”
Rebekah Raye’s “The Owl & Pussy Cat Set Sail”
Well, why not? (I think I actually saw their beautiful pea-green boat in Camden harbor last month.) |
Join us in October, 2013 at Lakewatch Manor—which is selling out fast—or let me know if you’re interested in painting with me in 2014. Click here for more information on my Maine workshops!