Gallery
The intent of our exhibits is to interweave art and activism, using our work to inspire viewers to act, all the while keeping them grounded in their empathy and humanity.
Click on a thumbnail to view the full image, more work by that artist and a link to their website.
Agusta Agustsson
June August
Catherine Bergson
Claudine Bing
Helen Canetta
Joe Caruso
Richard Alan Cohen
BJ Comerford
Barbara Eskin
Phyllis Ewen
Barbara Fletcher
Gillian Frazier
Justin Freed
Philip Gerstein
Becky Kisabeth Gibbs
Ruth Ginsberg-Place
Jill Goldman-Callahan
Lisa Goren
Kirstin Ilse
Marjorie Kaye
Marianne A. Kinzer
Yvonne Troxell Lamothe
Susan Leskin
Bette Ann Libby
Joseph Lieberman
Anni Lorenzini
Robin MacDonald-Foley
Preetha Mahadevan
Sally B. Moore
CJ Lori
Vickie Kocher Paret
Cyndy Patrick
Julia Purdy
Marsha N. Odabashian
Jennifer Jean Okumura
Carol Schweigert
Jane Sherrill
Erin Starr
Lisa Reindorf
Nora Charney Rosenbaum
Joanne Tarlin
Rebecca McGee Tuck
Niamh Ultaigh
Eleanor Steinadler
Mary Taggart
Carol Wontkowski
Elissa Yanover
James Varnum
Sharon Whitham
Featured Artists of the Month
Northern Waters 2, sculptural drawing, 24 x 18 in.
"Our earth is not a stable entity; we live on its very mobile surface. The natural world is far from settled but ever changeable"
The movement of the earth’s surface has been a source of inspiration and imagery for more than a decade. I explore anthropogenic climate change and its effect of land and water: rising seas, drying rivers, shifting coasts and volatile geothermal terrains. The surface of the earth has many forces that affect it.
Water flows, seas rise, rivers flood and/or dry. Land is altered as a result of the natural movement of waters, wind, and seismic activity as well as the intervention of humankind. My palette includes umbers, ochers, crimson, and sienna, blues and greys. Maps, charts, and photographs form the basis for my work. Many I turn into 3-dimensional reliefs allowing us to imagine ourselves within the landscape
In my work, I explore how our imagination and memories interact with the natural world.
Phyllis Ewen
Frozen Tundra, acrylic, pumice, ink, oil on linen, 36 x 24 in.
My paintings tell a story of our planet.
In an organic and abstract way my paintings represent the beauty of our planet and how our lands and oceans are changing. When I am working on a painting, I reflect on how nature was once linked together, the ground beneath our feet, the water translucent and moving, the trees and plants giving us air to breathe. Now I see the ice fractured and melting, the rainforest depleting, the deserts drying or flooding, the heat becoming oppressive. Our planet is struggling and with that our wildlife, our plants, and humans are struggling. It is the story we are writing, the history we are making, and the future we will be living.
Erin Starr