The
Arts On Guemes
A (growing) list of
artists living and working on Guemes Island. Want
to be included? |
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Stella
Spring/Flying Tower Studio
I create prints with
intaglio-type photo etching, monoprinting, and drypoint on an Ettan press.
Currently I am drawn to plants and their seasonal transformations. I love
cast-off treasures, such as the papery sheaths that encase the spears
of an allium flower, the skeletal basket of a poppy pod, or the web of
fibers still in the form of a squash left behind in the garden.
www.flyingtower.org
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email Stella Spring
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Northwind
Gallery
Opening
for the Season on May
23, 2008
Hours:
Friday-Saturday-Sunday: 10:30 am to 5:00 pm
Northwind
Gallery, 5362 Guemes Island Road (North Beach), Guemes Island. |
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Leo
Osborne Sculpture
To let it all flow
through me - the mind and spirit goes and the tool walks alone, I become
the simple vehicle within which the creative source conveys its sacred,
inner being. To be in the constant flow and rhythm of the dance is my
true ambition and desire. The artist is the instrument for release. The
mind moves and the tool walks on its own.
Become one with the
tool, one with the medium, blend, move together, feel the music and feel
life. I remain open for all possibilities to become present in my life
and work. In doing so, I keep the dream alive, allowing for the mystery
to unfold, creating mystology and striving for excellence.
Studio open by appointment
only.
www.leoosborne.com
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email Leo Osborne
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Madrona
Center
Madrona Center is
a non profit organization dedicated to the arts and advocating sustainable
ways of living. Visit our website to take a visual tour of our facility,
events and learn about our interests.
www.madronacenter.org
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email Madrona Center
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Outdoor Sculpture
On the Edge
Guemes Island artist
Kit Marcinko creates a large selection of imaginative conceptual pieces,
inspired by masks and totemic forms, and combines a wide range of media
from glass to wood, iron and bronze.
6571 West Shore Drive
• 360.293.6745 • comboverranch@yahoo.com |
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Sue
Roberts Sculpture
Long inspired by
the human form, I have sculpted the figure in a variety of materials,
including wax, wood, copper sheet metal, and most recently, clay and encaustic.
Recent showings at
Lucia Douglas Gallery in Bellingham and at Waterworks Gallery in Friday
Harbor.
Studio open by appointment
only.
5424 South Shore Drive •
360.293.8878
www.suerobertssculpture.com
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email Sue Roberts
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Tracy
W Powell, Sculptor
I have lived on Fidalgo
Island half my life, and have been visiting friends and family on Guemes
so often that I feel equally at home on both islands. I recently moved
my stone carving studio onto the Madrona Art Center property, just up
the hill north of Anderson’s Store. This is where I built my second
stone circle, which we dedicated on the summer solstice, 2006. This circle
is open to everybody who would like to worship, or celebrate, or meditate,
in a sacred space. It has been blessed by Samish feet, and filled by their
songs, and endorsed by a local druid. It is dedicated to the spirits of
threatened and endangered plants and animals.
I am honored to be
able to work on Guemes Island, and collaborate with the other artists
at Madrona.
I continue to carve
in wood and stone, and invite you to visit my website to see some of my
work, including the Maiden of Deception Pass, Jasper Gates Memorial in
Mt Vernon, The Dove Project, and stump carvings on Guemes. Feel free to
drop by my worksite out by the Madrona barn. Its usually best to call
to make sure I am there. My cell phone is 360-840-3826.
Peace and Love, Tracy
www.powellstudios.com
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email Tracy Powell
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Russell
Moline
Working with inspiration
and matierials provided by nature, Russell Moline designs and crafts furniture
of such exquisite form that one can only think of each piece as a work
of sculpture. From his home on Guemes Island Russell runs a commission-based
furniture business.
" I prefer to
find an owner for each piece before construction starts," Moline
says, "This allows me to better understand the task at hand."
Additional works can
be seen by appointment (360-588-9002), or on the web site below.
www.RoundRiverstudio.com
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email Russell Moline
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Marilee
Fosbre/Frog Pond Studio
Recently, I decided
to answer a call that first came to me when I moved to Guemes Island but
that has been put on hold for the last three years. This call is to use
art as a means of reflection and personal exploration and to invite others
to join me in this quest. The answer to this call has been born as Moving
Toward Meaning, a collection of new workshops inviting self-exploration
through art and writing. [More]
Studio open by appointment
only.
7264 West Shore Drive
• 360.293.3095
www.FrogPondPaperArts.com
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email Frog Pond Studio
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Cathy
Schoenberg
The figure has always
been included in my paintings of color,
pattern, and abstract energy. But, as in life, I am zeroing in on my priorities
and for art the figure has moved to the fore front.
Currently represented
at Waterworks Gallery in Friday Harbor. Paintings exhibited ongoing at
Rhody II in Bow, and Cottons in La Conner.
Coming exhibits include
ARTS ALIVE in La Conner this fall, and the Skagit City Studio on Fir Island
in November.
Studio open by appointment
only.
7731 Holiday Blvd.
• 360-299-1293
email Cathy Schoenberg
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Thelma
Palmer
Born on Fidalgo Island,
I moved to Guemes 23 years ago, and
have never lived farther than 10 miles from the house where I was born
at Lake Campbell. I am deeply rooted in the Pacific Northwest.
I have traveled widely,
however, squiring students around Europe and Asia for the government sponsored
Student Ambassador Program. My new husband and I are currently researching
ancestors in Norway and Italy. Recently spending winters in Puerto Rico,
I am discovering a whole new perspective on island living.
5869 Section Avenue
• 360.293.5398
email Thelma Palmer
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"Thelma
Palmer's new volume of poems should confirm
her as one of the essential poets of the Pacific Northwest."
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Bob
Anderson/Earthspirit Studio
My interest in art
was triggered, I think, by youthful trips to see the dioramas at the New
York Museum of Natural History. A high school art teacher lovingly let
me do what I wanted and I was allowed in the art room anytime my other
work was finished. In college my painting professor wisely looked at my
work and said, "Don't quit your day job.' But a sculpting professor's
work entranced me and I and friends introduced a sculpture class with
him into the Wesleyan curriculum. I was hooked on 3-D., and work with
form, space and texture.
earthspiritcircle@earthlink.net
• 293-3770 |
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