/// ABOUT THIS EXHIBITION

ArtsWorcester West Gallery

May 9 through June 16, 2024

Reception: Friday, May 10, 6:00-9:00 PM

 

For this competitive exhibition opportunity, all ArtsWorcester artist members were invited to submit traditional or reimagined landscapes and street views depicting locations in Worcester County. Artworks for View Finder were selected by Sarah Montross, Chief Curator, DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum/The Trustees. From 200 submissions, Montross selected 46 works by 43 artists for inclusion. These artists "share with us an incredible range in depicting landscapes, from quiet woodlands to lively urban streets, and across so many artistic mediums," says Montross. "It was a joy to jury this exhibition, especially as the art inspires us to get outside and be creative and curious about the world beyond our doorsteps."

 


/// THANK YOU

Exhibition support comes from:


     

 

Ongoing support comes from:


/// EXPLORE

View works below. For sales inquiries, please contact the galleries at sue@artsworcester.org or call (508) 755-5142.

Capital

Keri Anderson

This Is It

oil on wood panel
16" x 20"
2024
$2,000 (sold)

Vincent's, formerly Stoney O' Brian's, is one of the last remaining classic bars that offers live music. I am fascinated with capturing the exterior of this landscape with a thick cerulean blue atmosphere that matches the intrigue of how a building so simple and untouched can be sought after and filled with so many music lovers for many years. This modern day view reminds us of what Worcester was and still is in the hearts of the community despite all of the changes that are happening to the Worcester landscape. "This Is It" pays homage to a popular landmark.

@kerianderson68

Capital

Frank Armstrong

Westminster, MA 2020

photography, archival pigment print
14" x 21"
2024
$1,200

Common roadsides, rarely noticed.

Capital

Scott Bakal

New From Old

olympus om2n, ilford hp5 film
13" x 20"
2023
$500

@scottbakalphoto

Capital

Heather Barros

New England Botanic Garden No. 2

pastel
6.5" x 9"
2024
$480 (sold)

It's really just a pastel.

Capital

Carrie Crane

Welcoming the Day, Looking East, December 22, 2023 - March 19, 2024

photograph on aluminum
11" x 14"
2023-4
$250

I have been photographing the sunrise from my rocky perch on the far side of our pond from December 22, 2023 through March 19, 2024. It wasn't always clear and there were a few days it was too windy to be in the woods. And a few days I was away. But this is the most of it. One quarter trip around the sun.

@carrie_crane_art

Capital

June DaSilva

Mechanic St

giclée print
16" x 24"
2022
Not For Sale

@june.dslv

Capital

Cher Davis

Freedom Hike

digital photography
16" x 20" x 2"
2022
$325

Capturing nature’s beauty, the way I found it is my foundation. The groundwork starts with both feet in the earth. I let the picture and the vibe from that journey morph the moment into a representation of opportunities that didn’t exist without technology. My style mixes two core pillars: something I love (photography) with skills I have honed (technology).

Capital

Ella Delyanis

The Orange Marsh

oil on canvas
24" x 24"
2024
$2,800

This piece is an oil of a fall marsh in Shrewsbury. I took lots of photos in very difficult terrain of this site. In my studio, I assembled multiple photos to come up with the design for the painting. I also worked from a digital tablet. I wanted to paint this spot as I was intrigued by the wonderful orange displayed by the marsh grasses in mid October.

@EllaDelyanis

Capital

Ella Delyanis

Impending Storm

soft pastel on sanded paper
15.5 x 15.5 framed; 12.5 x 12.5 unframed
2020
$975

This piece depicts farmland across the street from where I boarded my horse in Uxbridge. I looked at that field a lot. I was intrigued by how the light affected that stand of trees. One day, a threatening grouping of clouds appeared and I knew this was the view I wanted to depict, so I created this piece in soft pastel.

@EllaDelyanis

Capital

Pamela Dorris DeJong

Welcome To Worcester

acrylic on canvas
18" x 24" x 1.5"
2024
$900

This painting was inspired by the shapes and colors I saw one day on my drive into Worcester recently. I took photos of my entry into the city. I used my cellphone camera mounted on my dashboard and kept poking my finger at it while I was driving. Most of the photos were unusable as my eyes were on the road! But I did get a few great shots. I chose to paint this view because it included part of the shapely span of the Kenneth Burns Memorial Bridge and the Heart sign.

@pameldejong

Capital

Timothy Doyle

Harrington Corner

oil on canvas
30" x 50"
2019
$1,000 (sold)

Historically a thriving intersection in Worcester, this view from 2019 shows Harrington Corner as it was in that year, with beautiful buildings, but little activity. At the heart of Downtown, this corner will be an indicator of the success of efforts to bring pedestrians back to the area. Cities around the country are at a crossroads, adjusting to the new way people use downtown commercial districts after a shift in how people work and shop. This shift unfortunately came as Worcester was in the midst of an effort to revitalize its downtown. In 2024, there are signs of hope.

@skwibo

Capital

Ethan Doyle

A Worcester Triple-Decker

inkjet print of a digital photograph
10'' x 15''
2021
$300

Capital

Joseph Dunn

August Sunset, Dawson Pond

oil
22" x 15"
2020
Not For Sale

Capital

Melody Fortier

Perhaps Some Found Answers #2

archival pigment print photograph in found case on found shelf, acrylic paint, mica flakes, crepe paper garland, faux berries,vines, sculpted paste leaves
18" x 18" x 9"
2022
$650

A preoccupation with death and the afterlife played a prominent role in Victorian era culture. Funerary practices became more elaborate, headstones and monuments were increasingly extravagant for families of means and the growing population called for greater numbers of graveyards. Some of our old cemeteries have become hidden and overgrown, others expanded over the decades and are still well tended. Such conspicuous treatment of the dead has faded with time. These haunting and beautiful burial grounds are woven into our landscapes, quiet, contemplative places available to those who chose to visit. Photo taken in Gardner, MA.

Capital

Liz Foss

Turkey Hill Brook

quilted fiber
17.25" x 19.75"
2024
$295 (sold)

My daily walk takes me by Turkey Hill Brook in Spencer. I have a favorite spot where I like to stop and look at the river and the trees. Listening to the river is calming and meditative. The changing of the seasons is marked by the leaves, or lack thereof on the trees, and the by the level of the water. It is a respite from the sometimes turbulent world.

@lizfossquilts

Capital

Sharon Freed

Opposite the Single Window

digital photography
16" x 20"
2024
$350

Capital

Leonard Gerwick

Hemlock

acrylic on canvas
52" x 42"
2020
$5,000

I sat almost beneath a mighty hemlock and looking up did an ink drawing of the trunk and limbs of the tree that extended a hundred and fifty feet into the sky, From the drawing I did the painting in my studio.

@gerwickpaintings

Capital

Dan Gillooly

Oh, Sweet Worcester: Triptych 2

digital inkjet print
32" x 8.5"
2023-2024
$400

Worcester, Massachusetts is the second-largest city in New England. These triptychs are a visual exploration of the city’s industrial infrastructure. Loading docks, factories, highway overpasses, and railroads, were once crucial links between American producers and nationwide transportation networks. Like other mid-sized American cities, it stands at the precipice of a great transformation due to urban development that may diminish its architectural heritage. As buildings are torn down in the name of progress, these photographs serve as a preservation effort to honor the city's industrial past and reveal a narrative of resilience and change.

@dgphoto11

Capital

Henry Glennon

Uncanny Sunset at Rutland

oil on canvas
15" x 30"
2024
$200

A Worcester County homage to the painter Tomás Sánchez.

Capital

Louis Hairapetian

lone birch

acrylic on masonite
14 3/8" x 25 1/4"
2024
$475 (sold)

Depicted is a plot of land adjacent to New Balance Field located off of Stafford Street. This stream is a tributary that eventually flows into the Blackstone River.

Capital

George Hancin

Cemetery Hill

oil on board
16" x 60"
2022
$1,000

I am an observational painter, I paint from life. Most often I paint landscapes and could be called a Plein Air painter. I start each painting on location and I try to approach each one with a fresh and open point of view. Most of each painting is finished on the spot, but they are frequently reworked and adjusted in my studio. I try to make my paintings more than just a copy of a place, but a narrative or documentary about a setting; creating a story and a feeling about a place.

@hancingeorge

Capital

Richard Hoyer

Barn with Cloud

digital photograph
12" x 12"
2024
$600

This is a black and white rural landscape photograph and I worked with elements of abstraction, surrealism, geometry and high contrast to create the final photograph.

Capital

Timothy Johnson

Night Tree

photograph (archival inkjet print)
14" x 14", (20 1/4" x 20 1/4" framed)
2020
$450

 

 

Capital

Timothy Johnson

Canopy

photograph (archival inkjet print)
14" x 14", (20 1/4" x 20 1/4" framed)
2020
$450

 

 

Capital

Victoria K. Chapman

Life Among Decay

watercolors, colored pencils, gel pen, gouache
11" x 14" (unframed), 16" x 20" (framed)
2023
$850

Along the quiet Black Pond trail of Harvard, MA lay many logs and stumps of rotting trees, long fallen and dead. But, among this death and decay, it is teaming with life. Fungus, lichen, moss, ferns, bugs, birds, and other animals—all taking advantage of the nutrients this decay provides. All life must die, but among that death, new life springs forth. Inspired by the hidden and wondrous pieces of life growing among the decay along these hiking trails, I hope it inspires viewers to stop and look closer at the natural world around them in Worcester county.

@weyakindesigns

Capital

Teresa Lamacchia

Long Pond, Rutland at 6:30 AM

acrylic paint and digital photograph on three cotton canvas panels
36" x 44"
2021
$1,550

Lakes, rivers and ponds are abundant in Central Massachusetts. During the pandemic my husband and I would often visit them to enjoy their natural beauty and to experience a sense of tranquility during those trying times. I began photographing them in every season. After editing the imagery to become semi-abstract and painterly, I had them printed on canvas and painted on top of the photographs, often adding additional canvas panels to extend the view.

Capital

Rebecca Mann

Pink Dawn

oil on canvas
16" x 24"
$650

Nothing compares to those moments of calm and serenity found in the untainted and pristine world of nature.

@rebecca_v_mann

Capital

Jillian Masi

View From the Summit of Wachusett Mountain

oil on canvas
20" x 20"
2024
$450 (sold)

On a good day, you can see for miles from this highest point in Worcester County. Looking east, a miniscule view of Boston appears faintly on the horizon. The land reaching out below looks like an ocean of blue and green, the sky is clear and fresh.

@jmasi_art

Capital

Anne McNevin

Glacial Rocks, Peppercorn Hill, Upton, MA #1

photography
16" x 20"
2022
$150

Peppercorn Hill in Upton, MA is a remarkable jumble of boulders deposited by glaciers more than ten thousand years ago and it's practically in my back yard. These boulders evoke long lost mysteries from our world's past.

Capital

Zev Morgan

Close the Curtains before The Creature Sees Us

mixed media: wool felt, cotton fabric, embroidery, wood
23" x 20"
2024
Not For Sale

Embedded in all of our DNA is the inclination to hide from whatever is lurking in the dark outside our homes, a relic of the past before the assurance of safety behind four walls and locked doors. Even in the suburbs of Worcester, our survival instincts look out at our backyards and ask us to consider what dangers could be just behind the trees. Our modern human brains tell us nothing is there... so why do we still close the curtains?

Capital

Diane Mulligan

Snowshoeing at Donker Farm

watercolor on 100% cotton rough watercolor paper
18" x 22"
2023
$350

Donker Farm is a Greater Worcester Land Trust property near Tatnuck Square. To visit the farm is to glimpse the rural landscape that once existed in Worcester. Although I painted this at my studio from reference photos I took on a snowy stroll, I tried to be true to life by depicting the farm yard as it is, clutter and all. This is a lived-in place, not a museum. As an Urban Sketcher, I am moved to document places near my home in Worcester as a record of my experiences.

@dianepaintsflowers

Capital

Kathy Murray

Nature's Classroom

multiple plate relief print
9" x 17"
2023
$250 (sold)

This print captures my experience of walking on the trails at the Prindle Pond Conference Center during the height of foliage season.

@kathy_murray

Nicole Overbaugh

photo op

digital video
0:02:00
2024
Not For Sale

The world was black and white, until they got a different perspective. "photo op" is a narrative short about sharing the world with others.

Capital

A. Reid

Viewfinder//Flag (Flower Crown Farm)

machine-pieced, cyanotype-printed, and coreopsis-dyed cotton, hand-quilted with coreopsis-dyed linen thread
20" x 30"
2024
Not For Sale

A viewfinder-flag has a window in the center, so that it can be used to both mark and observe a place. This one is sewn from cyanotypes printed in collaboration with summer 2022 workshop participants at Flower Crown Farm, and from additional fabric dyed with coreopsis grown on-site by farmer Patricia Kirkpatrick. The front features the quilt block Garden Path (adapted from Abba May Alcott's version) and incorporates Flying Geese at a various scales, shrunk down and scattered as Flying Pollinators in improvised blocks.

Capital

Robin Reynolds

Queen Anne’s Lace & Hydrangea

oil on birch panel
30” x 30”
2019
$3,900

I embrace the notion of beauty and create luminous, lush, layered surfaces outside painting plein air from spring to fall in my backyard garden in North Brookfield. I paint and find inspiration watching the life cycle of nature. The flowers and plants act as a catalyst, allowing me to manipulate paint and create a dance between abstraction and representation.
In my paintings I strive to capture the essence of a place through its growth, bloom and decay. I want people to experience that heightened awareness and see beauty in our vulnerable environment.

@robinreynolds7259

Capital

Mari Saxon

Little Red Riding Hood

photography, giclée print on fine art paper
16" x 24"
2023
$215

Wachusett forest.

@mari_saxon

Capital

Mari Saxon

Quinsigamond Lake Shore

photography, giclée print on fine art paper
16" x 24"
2023
$215

@mari_saxon

Capital

Tracy Spadafora

Skies & Organic Findings, Westborough, MA

digital photographs and organic materials in wood boxes
15" x 13"
2024
$350

I collect images and organic material during my regular walks and hikes in Worcester County. Over the years, I have explored themes in my artwork that have addressed the human relationship to the environment. Nature speaks to me during my time in woods, and I am always looking for ways to preserve or recreate some of these moments by incorporating nature into my artwork.

Capital

Joanne Stowell

Rust and Eggs

oil on wood
15" x 17"
2021
$1,000

My work is a true representation of life and every piece tells a story. My paintings depict my daily life. I capture the struggles as well as the quiet moments that often go unappreciated. Although my work is never glamorized, I do create in a way that makes the viewer want to look, usually through lighting. Above all, I desire for my work to be relatable. My paintings are meant to create connections through conversation and storytelling. Some say my work appears dark, but to those I must respond that, as with life, a sense of humor is often required.

@joannestowellart

Capital

Morgan Tartakoff

Blackstone River

woodcut on linen with letter press lettering
8.5" x 50"
2024
$300 (sold)

“Blackstone River,” a woodcut hand printed on linen fabric, captures a view from above of the Blackstone River, one of the most prominent features of Worcester County. This river has both carved the land and history of the area. Between each slim, snaking natural section of river you find lake-like spots where old man-made dams still stand in the towns of Grafton, Whitinsville, Uxbridge, and Blackstone. If you look even closer, you can find very small, thin, straight sections of what remains of the long canal that once connected Worcester to Providence.

@LittlePebblePrintshop

Capital

Sarah Thompson

Reflection

acrylic on canvas
16" x 20"
2024
$500 (sold)

"Reflection" is a painting inspired by a photograph I took during a November walk in Hadwen Park in Worcester. There are so many stately, old trees surrounding Curtis Pond, and while I walk this route almost daily, there is always something different to observe. The muted fall colors, the ripples in the water abstracting the reflections, and the dappled sunlight shining through the trees all came together to create a singular moment of beauty and peace.

@sarah.thompson.artwork

Capital

Bernard Tobin

Walk in the Woods- Ice Reflections

oil pastels
12" x 9"
2023
$300

This is part of a series created from winter walks in the Sturbridge woods of ice formations around a group of trees along the path. These pieces capture the ice reflections of the abstract colors and formations of the surrounding nature.

@tobin.ben92

Capital

Richard Tranfaglia

Old Stone Church Reflection

photography, archival digital inkjet print
18" x 24"
2022
$255

Capital

Lynn Viamari

Waiting for Spring - Chestnut Hill Farm

oil on panel
6" x 18"
2024
$400

I often walk the trails at Chestnut Hill Farm or just sit and observe. These dirt mounds are sitting out in the field, seemingly waiting to be used when the weather warms up. I like their strong solid forms which, while conveying a confident sense of purpose, are also gentle and humble.

@lynnviart

Capital

Francis Warner

After a Shower at Cascade Falls

oil on canvas
16" x 20"
2021
$350

 

For sales inquiries, please contact the galleries at sue@artsworcester.org or call (508) 755-5142.

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