Leslie Grigsby
Rosemary Cooley
Rhoda Kahler
Wendy Prellwitz
Takashi Ichihara
Peter Guttmacher
Jason Patterson
Marilee Schumann
Sometimes I wonder if Agnes Martin was right when she said visual art cannot, and should not, be explained in words.
Rick Bisgyer
Sometimes I wonder if Agnes Martin was right when she said visual art cannot, and should not, be explained in words.
Catherine Kernan
Elizabeth Casqueiro is a visual artist who was born in England and grew up
in Portugal.
Meredith Davies Hadaway
Peace begins when expectations end.
Kathryn O’Grady
My work is fueled by a lifelong obsession with color and awe at the monstrous complexity of the natural world. For the last two decades, I have lived and painted in rural Maryland. I am in love with the weather, the crops, the light, the dirt, the weeds.
Deborah T. Colter
Peace begins when expectations end.
Susan Goldman
I’m playing with what can happen inside and outside variations on themes as they continue to reconfigure over time.
Simma Liebman
Inspired by design patterns – visible regularities of form – symmetries, spirals, waves, foams, cracks, circles, stripes – I search for unique forms within the natural world. After capturing these forms/patterns in photographs, I discover engaging abstract compositions that “speak” to me.
Deborah Weiss
The exchange between terrain, climate, temperature and the elements is constant: sometimes consistent and often times transforming by the moment.
James Tatum
His landscape paintings begin en plein air with a series of drawings, watercolours and acrylics, and are completed in his studio in Exeter
Katherine Kerr Allen
Marc Castelli – Available for Purchase
There is a deep and profound magic in the light carried by the wind on the water. It insinuates itself in certain people that will respond to water no matter where they are.
Shelley Robzen
Simplicity of line seeking the purity of form is the essence of my sculpture.
Darlys Ewoldt
Growing up in rural Iowa, Darlys Ewoldt felt compelled to draw and make things from a variety of materials. She was introduced to using metals as a medium at Drake …
Women Helping Women
Home
Leigh Wen
What is water did Bloom, water lover, drawer of water, water carrier returning to the range, admire?….. Its universality… its unplumbed profundity…. the restlessness of its waves and surface particles… …
Mary Pritchard
My work is based on two keys elements, the nature of the pastel medium and the subject matter that has the greatest appeal to me–the rural landscape. I respond emotionally …
Beverly Ress
My work is an ongoing visual investigation of mortality. I draw carefully observed representations of things that have wandered off this mortal coil – birds, plants, bugs, and animals. Each …
Linda Richards
Throughout my entire life, I have been genuinely touched by nature on a daily basis. It has been my refuge and a source of real solace to me, so it seemed like the most natural thing in the world for it to be the source that I continually come back to in my art.
Carol Rowan
I found shelter in Jackson Pollack’s paintings as a teenager. Then began my regular visitations to the Vermeer’s at the Met. Now, 30 years later, I find deep peace in …
John Ruppert
Over the past 35years, John Ruppert has been working in cast metals; manufactured materials such as chain-link fabric; mixed media; and more recently, video, digital 3D printing and digital composite …
Rebecca Saylor Sack
I mine anxieties of the corporeal body through the liquidity of paint. I am deeply fascinated by the ever-changing processes of growth and decay visible in our environment—of our own …
Eve Stockton
Like artists through the ages, I make nature-based art. How does one capture the evanescent clouds, the light through the trees or the bursting forth of new life?
Jon Mort
Millennial artist Jon Mort is widely recognized for his startlingly realistic colored pencil and large-scale graphite images and is also a highly sought-after portrait artist.
Cynthia Burke
The diversity of the natural world yields a never-ending supply of subjects for my paintings, however I never place my subjects in their natural environment. It seems far more interesting …
Elizabeth Casqueiro
“Art for me is a search for the self in the fragile and interconnected space between human existence and the world that sustains us, between that which we fabricate and that which is purely organic. Ultimately, I hope that many years from now others will look at my art and decide that my generation was, after all, aware and concerned about this place we call home.”
Ken Castelli
Paintings, Drawings, & Models from Maryland’s Eastern Shore http://kencastelliart.blogspot.com/
Janet Christensen
The foundation for the imagery comes during walks on the farm in Kent County and early morning rows on the river, often before the sun breaches the horizon. This work …
Jeremy Newman | Allison Ciancibelli
Our work is based on observations of our home in North Central Washington, a place of rugged mountains, sagebrush foothills, and narrow river valleys. While the snow-capped peaks inspire awe, …
Blake M. Conroy
Blake Conroy creates drawings about nature and human perception. He laser-cuts paper and metal, making marks whose appearance changes subtly as the light of day progresses from morning to evening, and then into the artificial light of nighttime.
Katherine Cox
The act of laying graphite down onto paper is personal, intimate and immediate.
Zaria Forman
Zaria Forman documents climate change with pastel drawings. She travels to remote regions of the world to collect images and inspiration for her work, which is exhibited worldwide. She has …
Heidi Fowler
Heidi Fowler’s work examines man’s relationship with the environment. Her artwork combines everyday objects such as junk mail, plastic bottle caps, and old magazine pages with traditional art materials.
Susan Hostetler
After earning her fine arts degree in painting, Susan Hostetler added hand papermaking as a skill with awards from the Russell Siebert and Tiffany Foundations to study with Twinrocker Handmade Paper in Indiana, where she made custom papers for artists such as Rauschenberg, Warhol and Jasper John
Emily Kalwaitis
I am interested in that which is half-hidden and mysterious. I’m drawn to subtle emotional states, barely perceivable, fleeting and unsubstantial. I’m drawn to things that fade. My most recent …
Rebecca Kamen
As an artist (and novice anthropologist), the activity of travel, exploring the cultural and geographical array offered by new and unique places, thoroughly influences both my art and my life. …
Susan Kerns
Botanical subjects are an inspiration for me whether in the form of landscape or individual plants. I see them as architectural structures revealed by light. I seek the universal truth …
Lisa Lebofsky
Lisa Lebofsky’s paintings explore our emotional and physical relationship with nature.
Elizabeth MacDonald
Through clay, I express my connection to the natural world. Each work speaks to the process of change, whether through the appearance of age or the spontaneity of gesture. Lured …
Grace Mitchell
In people as well as plants, roots run deeply and support growth, history, tradition in the garden/world.
Marc Castelli
There is a deep and profound magic in the light carried by the wind on the water. It insinuates itself in certain people that will respond to water no matter where they are.
Michael Kahn
The seashore is enchanting place where sounds of crashing waves fill our ears and low slanting sunlight illuminates the wind blown spray off the rolling waves.
Zemma Mastin White
The continuous voice in my work is a mixture of layering line, color and forms, creating patterns and texture.
Vicco von Voss
A tree is an ever-changing organic being. It sends branches where leaves can find sunlight, and crotches form where branches grow to become secondary trunks.
Susan Tessem
Larry Schroth
From disorder (a chaos) Order grows – Grows fruitful The chaos feeds it. William Carlos Williams
Kenneth Schiano
To paint is an easy and joyously messy task; it’s a pastime enjoyed by many. To create a painting is more taxing, and is accomplished by very few.
Marcy Dunn Ramsey
This current work is a further exploration into the relationship between the natural world and the human psyche.
Celia Pearson
While I love the beauty I witness all around me, I am as compelled by something I cannot see as much as that which I can see.
Greg Mort
Widely recognized as a renowned contemporary realist, Greg Mort’s art is included in the Smithsonian American Art Museum, The Delaware Art Museum, the Corcoran Museum of Art, the Portland Art Museum and many more.
Claire McArdle
As the figures emerge from the material there is a representation of the feminine archetype and a sensuousness that both females and marble share.
Anne Leighton Massoni
The act of remembering is what currently drives my work. To visually navigate the stories in my mind… to remember stories that may not exist, to imagine stories not yet told.
Alessandra Manzotti
With my images I try to evoke a sense of space and motion often enhanced by rich and dramatic use of monochromatic tones.
Ebby Malmgren 
Sometimes I wonder if Agnes Martin was right when she said visual art cannot, and should not, be explained in words.
Joe Karlik
Joe Karlik’s inspirations translate into art in many media: oils, collage, wood, found objects, photography and mixed media. His art, like nature, provides a full range of textures.
Karen Hubacher
As a painter I work outside the logical confines of language. I try to describe intangible realities for which there are no words.
Elizabeth DaCosta Ahern 
Painting for me is as essential as breathing, a necessity and a delight. Ideas for painting come from a compelling desire to shape and to abstract my experiences in nature, culture and life.