UPCOMING WELLFLEET EVENTS
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Wellfleet Recreation
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday, 3:30 - 5:00 pm, at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$240 for the one-week session.
Five Summer Sessions: July 8 - 12; July 15 - 19; July 22 - 26; July 29 - August 2; August 19 - 23
To Register: email directly to Geographygameshow@yahoo.com
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Wellfleet Recreation
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday, 3:30 - 5:00 pm, at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$240 for the one-week session.
Five Summer Sessions: July 8 - 12; July 15 - 19; July 22 - 26; July 29 - August 2; August 19 - 23
To Register: email directly to Geographygameshow@yahoo.com
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Wellfleet Recreation
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday, 3:30 - 5:00 pm, at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$240 for the one-week session.
Five Summer Sessions: July 8 - 12; July 15 - 19; July 22 - 26; July 29 - August 2; August 19 - 23
To Register: email directly to Geographygameshow@yahoo.com
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Wellfleet Recreation
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday, 3:30 - 5:00 pm, at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$240 for the one-week session.
Five Summer Sessions: July 8 - 12; July 15 - 19; July 22 - 26; July 29 - August 2; August 19 - 23
To Register: email directly to Geographygameshow@yahoo.com
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Wellfleet Recreation
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday, 3:30 - 5:00 pm, at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$240 for the one-week session.
Five Summer Sessions: July 8 - 12; July 15 - 19; July 22 - 26; July 29 - August 2; August 19 - 23
To Register: email directly to Geographygameshow@yahoo.com
Artist Reception: William Evaul - “Whence They Come, Wither They Go”
Bill Evaul - “Whence They Come, Wither They Go”, White-Line Color Woodcuts
Part of a monthly changing exhibit showcasing local artists.
Great Pond Gallery at the Wellfleet Adult Community Center, 715 Old Kings Highway
Month of December, M-F: 8am - 4pm
Reception for Artist: Sunday, December 10th, 5-7 pm
Robert Rindler: Curator, James Connors: Co-Curator & Installation
Bill Evaul is an internationally recognized painter and printmaker who maintains his studio in Provincetown. He studied painting and printmaking at Fleisher Art Memorial, Philadelphia, Syracuse University School of Art, NY, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NYC and the Whitney Museum of American Art. NYC. He came to Provincetown in 1970 as a painting Fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center and has maintained his studio there ever since. Evaul’s artworks are in national and world-wide collections from Tel Aviv to Hong Kong. His work is held by The Library of Congress, The Zimmerli Art Museum, The Boston Museum of Fine Arts, The Provincetown Art Association and Museum, The Cape Cod Museum of Art and several others.
In 1979, while on assignment for Pratt Graphics Center’s Print Review magazine, Bill Evaul discovered a rare technique of woodcut color printmaking that was originated in 1915 in Provincetown. First known as the “Provincetown Print” because it didn’t fit into any of the known classifications, it had fallen into obscurity, with only a few living artists who had actually practiced the technique. Evaul researched the history of its invention and produced a feature article for the magazine. Following that, he embarked on a self-directed course of study to learn how to make what is widely known today as the “White-Line Color Woodcut.”
This exhibition gives a brief overview of Evaul’s journey, beginning with some of his earliest prints and progressing forward for over 40 years with his development and extension of the practice. Building upon the techniques of BJO Nordfeldt, Blanche Lazzell, Ethel Mars and the other original members of the Provincetown Printmakers group, Evaul has since made contributions of his own, including more intense layering of colors, more painterly handling of the images, use of oil paint and oil inks in addition to the traditional watercolor, printing on canvas as well as paper, exploring portraiture, and working in large scale.
Evaul had conducted numerous workshops and classes nationwide. While the images for the prints are typically created based on a drawing or painting, he has found that, coming full circle, his prints can inspire new paintings.
Monthly Exhibit at Great Pond Gallery
Bill Evaul - “Whence They Come, Wither They Go”, White-Line Color Woodcuts
Part of a monthly changing exhibit showcasing local artists.
Great Pond Gallery at the Wellfleet Adult Community Center, 715 Old Kings Highway
Month of December, M-F: 8am - 4pm
Reception for Artist: Sunday, December 10th, 5-7 pm
Robert Rindler: Curator, James Connors: Co-Curator & Installation
Bill Evaul is an internationally recognized painter and printmaker who maintains his studio in Provincetown. He studied painting and printmaking at Fleisher Art Memorial, Philadelphia, Syracuse University School of Art, NY, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NYC and the Whitney Museum of American Art. NYC. He came to Provincetown in 1970 as a painting Fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center and has maintained his studio there ever since. Evaul’s artworks are in national and world-wide collections from Tel Aviv to Hong Kong. His work is held by The Library of Congress, The Zimmerli Art Museum, The Boston Museum of Fine Arts, The Provincetown Art Association and Museum, The Cape Cod Museum of Art and several others.
In 1979, while on assignment for Pratt Graphics Center’s Print Review magazine, Bill Evaul discovered a rare technique of woodcut color printmaking that was originated in 1915 in Provincetown. First known as the “Provincetown Print” because it didn’t fit into any of the known classifications, it had fallen into obscurity, with only a few living artists who had actually practiced the technique. Evaul researched the history of its invention and produced a feature article for the magazine. Following that, he embarked on a self-directed course of study to learn how to make what is widely known today as the “White-Line Color Woodcut.”
This exhibition gives a brief overview of Evaul’s journey, beginning with some of his earliest prints and progressing forward for over 40 years with his development and extension of the practice. Building upon the techniques of BJO Nordfeldt, Blanche Lazzell, Ethel Mars and the other original members of the Provincetown Printmakers group, Evaul has since made contributions of his own, including more intense layering of colors, more painterly handling of the images, use of oil paint and oil inks in addition to the traditional watercolor, printing on canvas as well as paper, exploring portraiture, and working in large scale.
Evaul had conducted numerous workshops and classes nationwide. While the images for the prints are typically created based on a drawing or painting, he has found that, coming full circle, his prints can inspire new paintings.
Artist Reception: Naya Bricher, Recent Paintings - Monthly Exhibit at Great Pond Gallery
Naya Bricher - Recent Paintings
Part of a monthly changing exhibit showcasing local artists.
Artist Reception: Friday, November 10, 5-7 pm
Great Pond Gallery at the Wellfleet Adult Community Center, 715 Old Kings Highway
Month of November, M-F: 8 am - 4 pm
Robert Rindler: Curator, James Connors: Co-Curator & Installation
Artist Bio:
Raised in South Kent, CT, Naya Bricher is an artist based year-round in Provincetown, MA. She is an alumna of Miss Porter’s School and Smith College, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with highest honors in studio art. In 2013, she was a resident at the Vermont Studio Center.
In 2014, she joined the Fine Arts Work Center as a staff-in-residence. Currently, she is the Administrative Director at the Fine Arts Work Center and the Administrative Coordinator for the dune shacks of the Peaked Hill Trust. In addition to her creative practice and career in arts administration, she is a fitness instructor offering Zumba classes throughout the Outer Cape.
Naya Bricher’s paintings honor the effervescence of an object-filled life within a content-rich world. She revels in whimsicality and is intrigued by non-essential indulgences, such as desserts, pool toys and novelty pets. Her attraction to intense color, combined imagery and cumulative narrative shape her artworks. Culled from social media, cartoons and dreams, her paintings combine cultural references into a personal form of celebration.
Please visit Naya’s website, nayabricher.com or send any inquiries about her work directly to nayabrIcher@gmail.com
Naya Bricher: Recent Paintings - Monthly Exhibit at Great Pond Gallery
Naya Bricher - Recent Paintings
Part of a monthly changing exhibit showcasing local artists.
Great Pond Gallery at the Wellfleet Adult Community Center, 715 Old Kings Highway
Month of November, M-F: 8am - 4pm
Robert Rindler: Curator, James Connors: Co Curator & Installation
Artist Bio:
Raised in South Kent, CT, Naya Bricher is an artist based year-round in Provincetown, MA. She is an alumna of Miss Porter’s School and Smith College, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with highest honors in studio art. In 2013, she was a resident at the Vermont Studio Center.
In 2014, she joined the Fine Arts Work Center as a staff-in-residence. Currently, she is the Administrative Director at the Fine Arts Work Center and the Administrative Coordinator for the dune shacks of the Peaked Hill Trust. In addition to her creative practice and career in arts administration, she is a fitness instructor offering Zumba classes throughout the Outer Cape.
Naya Bricher’s paintings honor the effervescence of an object-filled life within a content-rich world. She revels in whimsicality and is intrigued by non-essential indulgences, such as desserts, pool toys and novelty pets. Her attraction to intense color, combined imagery and cumulative narrative shape her artworks. Culled from social media, cartoons and dreams, her paintings combine cultural references into a personal form of celebration.
Please visit Naya’s website, nayabricher.com or send any inquiries about her work directly to nayabrIcher@gmail.com
Lyle M. Butts: A Memorial Exhibition of a Wellfleet Painter at Great Pond Gallery
Lyle M. Butts (1912-2010)
A Memorial Exhibition of a Wellfleet Painter
Part of a monthly changing exhibit showcasing local artists.
Great Pond Gallery at the Wellfleet Adult Community Center, 715 Old Kings Highway
Robert Rindler: Curator, James Connors: Co-Curator & Installation
On Exhibit October 2 - 31, M-F: 8am - 4pm
Lyle M. Butts was born in Avon, MA on October 17, 1912. He left after high school to attend art school in Boston and subsequently became a news photographer for the Worcester Post. During World War II he worked at Fore River Shipbuilding in Quincy, MA, inspecting ships that were earmarked for the war effort. Following this, he earned his Professional Engineer License and began to build homes in the Easton area where he and his wife Helen had moved. He later worked for the Foxboro Company in Bridgewater, MA, but retired in 1972 to move to the Cape permanently. He died on May 10, 2010 at the age of 97. That’s the bare bones of his life; but there is so much more.
Lyle loved the Cape and Wellfleet in particular. He and Helen started coming here in the 1930s and built a number of houses for friends, particularly in the Indian Neck area where he had purchased land in the late 1940s. After retirement, he sold the Indian Neck property and purchased land on Route 6, where he set up Bay Area Plans to sell blueprints of smaller houses and sheds. At the same time, his son, Lyle B., purchased a location on Route 6 for his company Bay Sails Marine. Lyle M. aided his son’s company with engineering drawings, graphic design, and advertising layouts.
Lyle M. never lost his fascination with art, though he never became a professional artist. He began experimenting, first with watercolor and later with oils. He loved both landscape and seascape and found New England, and especially Cape Cod, the perfect setting for expressing this love. Art was a part of who he was, not just something he did. He had an inventive mind and a keen power of observation
Lyle B. and I are pleased to have this opportunity to showcase many of his works. When we were sorting through his possessions, we realized just how much art he had created and how good it was. So it was our desire to share his artistic vision that led to this show. Lyle M. would have loved it! We hope you do, too.
If you would like to purchase any of the works designated for sale, please contact me.
Mimi Butts • 508-509-7615 • m.butts@hotmail.com
Gallery Opening: Chris Kelly, Lorrie La Pointe, and Suzette Lebenzon -AMZehnder Gallery
AMZehnder Gallery
Chris Kelly, Lorrie La Pointe, and Suzette Lebenzon
New exhibit opens on September 21st, with an opening reception on September 23rd, and features the works of Chris Kelly, Lorrie La Pointe, and Suzette Lebenzon.
The gallery is open every day except Wednesday, from 11 am - 6 pm.
Artist reception: Saturday, September 23rd from 6-8 pm.
AMZehnder Gallery, 25 Bank Street No.3 Wellfleet
(508) 560-8249
Opening Reception: Group Exhibition - Robert Shreefter, Susie Nielsen, Hanni Woodbury, Mark Brennan
Off Main Gallery
Group Exhibition: Robert Shreefter, Susie Nielsen, Hanni Woobury and Mark Brennan
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 23, from 5 - 7 pm
On Exhibit Starting: September 23
Off Main Gallery, 75 Commercial St
Craft Afternoon: Tiny Paintings
Wellfleet Public Library
WE HAVE 3" X 3" CANVASES - ALL WE NEED ARE THE ARTISTS! DROP BY AND PAINT A TINY PAINTING OF YOUR CHOICE!
PROMPTS PROVIDED!
Open to kids and adults!
Wednesday, September 13th, 4:00 -6:00 PM
For more Library events, both in-person and virtual, visit: www.wellfleetlibrary.org/events
Barbara Gordon - Exhibit at Great Pond Gallery
Barbara Gordon - Tales of the Farblunget paintings.
Part of a monthly changing exhibit showcasing local artists.
On Exhibit: Sept 10 - 29
ARTIST’S RECEPTION SUNDAY 10 SEPTEMBER 1-3PM
1:00 Artist Talk with Barbara Gordon
2:00 Q&A with Alzheimer’s Family Support Center of Cape Cod Staff
The process of making art for me is part meditation, part storytelling, and always an attempt to communicate from the heart. The edges of an image define a small, specific piece of the infinite world, at a particular time, from my particular point of view. The space in a painting is a metaphor for existence; the image is a record of my experience. The qualities of the materials-viscosity and color of paint, mark-making and charcoal textures in drawing, color, texture, layering, and surprises in printmaking are all just as important as the images and ideas. Each painting, drawing, print, collage, or book is a dialogue: an interaction between the materials, internal experience, external experience, observation, ideas, and memory.
The paintings in this show, Tales of the Farblunget, combine my responses to certain kinds of landscapes with the story about how I am experiencing living with my husband’s dementia. Farblunget means lost and confused in Yiddish. My husband has Alzheimer's disease. The "conversations" that my lost and confused husband and I have these days are not only excruciatingly repetitive, but they are also often absurd, strange, surreal, and sometimes, especially in retrospect, hilarious: Farblunget. The titles of these paintings are direct quotes from him. This is my way of processing, communicating, and making a record of my experience. No one could imagine what it’s like, unless you could witness it.
Artist Bio:
I have been making art for as long as I can remember. I graduated from Cornell University in 1982 with a BFA in painting, and from Boston University in 1985 with an MFA in Studio Teaching. I taught art in one way or another, including over 30 years in public elementary schools, until I retired from teaching in June 2023. I continue to work in my studio in Foxborough, MA.
Please contact the artist directly with all inquiries about her work. Barbara Gordon: artbarbaragordon.com bgordon1@mac.com
Great Pond Gallery at the Wellfleet Adult Community Center, 715 Old Kings Highway
Month of September M-F: 8am - 4pm
Robert Rindler: Curator, James Connors: Co Curator & Installation
Artist Talk - Nathalie Ferrier
FARM PROJECTS
Nathalie Ferrier - Mapping The Magic
Exhibit: September 1 - 14
Artist Talk with Nathalie Ferrier and Independent writer Sophie Mann-Shafir:
Sunday, September 10, 12 pm
Farm Projects, 335 Main St.
“Holding a piece of coral is like holding a relic, and looking at it closely is like taking another step back on Planet Earth. I was drawn to the contrast between its endurance and its fragility, and to the idea of how a piece of coral connects us-through thousands of years, even a hundred thousand years-to things that existed before its reef was first formed. Something similar is revealed when looking at a plant through a microscope and seeing its structure: running through time, through places, through living things, there is commonality.”
“The new paintings I have done, with many concentric colors, are about emotions-and yes, there’s a kind of psychic mapping. When we are children, we all understand about the self, and I guess these paintings are really about exploring that idea, about following a path back to that. When I was three, I remember thinking of myself-my soul and my body-and somehow recognizing some essential core, one I thought I could project in the future. I think it’s probably that same feeling of self and of longing every living creature has, and that all art connects to.”
Extracts from an interview with writer Katherine Hazzard for the PROVINCETOWN ARTS magazine 2023/24.
Meditative Drawings:
These drawings were inspired by coral fragments found on a Miami beach.
Once tiny marine invertebrates, luminous bones, porous and monumental, landscapes with precise borders, these timeless corals harbor striking maps of the interior that make visible the simultaneity of the past and present.
Pasage Series:
These paintings are about mapping emotions about the self and retracing the psychic path we first experience as children, they aim to map our essential core.
About the artist.
Multimedia artist Nathalie Ferrier was born in France and has lived year-round in Truro, Cape Cod since 1999. Recently she started to spend time in Miami in between academic semesters. Miami’s tropical light, plants, architecture, its people and vibes have inspired her to create new works.
Ferrier studied at the Ecole de Haute Couture in Paris and worked for ten years as a fashion designer for Haute Couture. She also created a toy company (Born to be Wild) and designed a line of stuffed animals and wooden toys sold at museum stores throughout the United States.
In 2007, Ferrier received an MFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.
Currently, Ferrier is the Higgins Art Gallery Director and Curator and teaches fiber arts at the Cape Cod Community College.
Film Screening: Daughter of Rubens
Wellfleet Public Library
FILM SCREENING: DAUGUTER OF RUBENS
A short film documentary on the life and paintings of Nancy Ellen Craig (1927-2015)
The life and art of Truro-based artist Nancy Ellen Craig (1927-2015) is introduced in the short documentary film, Daughter of Rubens. Once regarded as the next John Singer Sargent, she began her mostly self-taught prolific career in New York, winning many prestigious awards including the Benjamin Altman Figure Prize of the National Academy of Design at the age of 26. A celebrated portraitist, she was commissioned by some of the most illustrious families of America and Europe including Frank Llyod Wright, Norman Mailer, The Guinness Family, The Duke of Argyll, Anjelica Huston, and Sean Connery to name a few. Daughter of Rubens sheds light on the bodies of work by this remarkable but unsung master artist. It is the film director's and producers' hope that audiences can comprehend the magnitude of her talent in the context of her story.
Followed by Q&A with film producer Christine Jones.
Sat., September 9 @ 6:00 PM
Library events, both in-person and virtual, visit: www.wellfleetlibrary.org/events
Gallery Opening -AMZehnder Gallery
AMZehnder Gallery
New exhibit opens September 2nd featuring the works of Ellen Sinel and Kate McConnell.
The gallery is open every day except Wednesday, from 11 am - 6 pm. Openings will be on Saturday evenings from 6-8 pm.
AMZehnder Gallery, 25 Bank Street No.3 Wellfleet
(508) 560-8249
Opening Reception: Connie Saems - NOT KNOW: A POP-UP
Off Main Gallery
Connie Saems - NOT KNOW: A POP-UP
Artists are supposed to be able to talk about their work – we are asked to describe, explain, and provide historical references for the art we create. But if you were to ask me these questions, I would have to say that I just do NOT KNOW. I have always wanted to KNOW. I have always searched for understanding to help me KNOW. But last year this changed. To help me cope with NOT KNOWing, I followed a familiar path, mark making. While I did NOT KNOW what I was making, nor why, I let the marks guide me.
NOT KNOW is drawn on a 7 foot long piece of brown craft paper, initially started in 2016 at Castle Hill Art Center while attending a workshop with the artist Lesley Dill. Each day of the workshop I would take out my stencils and write a word on it. I did NOT KNOW why I did this nor where the idea would take me. At the end of the workshop, I rolled up the paper and it sat in my closet for 8 years. Last year, when asked to work on one piece each day for 10 weeks, I brought out this paper. Once again I added a word. For those 10 weeks I went to this paper and worked, thinking about a life that had just ended. Because thread is a material I have used in the past, I looked to it to create a feeling for many of the words. Shoe polish, ink, acrylic paint, markers and charcoal to add significant aspects to illustrate the meaning of these words.
At the same time, I started making marks on paper and canvas using acrylic paint and charcoal, still NOT KNOWing what these marks meant, allowing the juice of what was inside to flow.
NOT KNOW has become a metaphor for my life. Honestly, I still like to KNOW but can be a lot more comfortable when I do NOT KNOW.
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 2nd from 6 - 8 pm
Off Main Gallery, 75 Commercial St
Gallery Opening - Nathalie Ferrier
FARM PROJECTS
Nathalie Ferrier - Mapping The Magic
Exhibit: September 1 - 14
Opening Reception: September 2, 5 - 7 pm
Farm Projects, 335 Main St.
“Holding a piece of coral is like holding a relic, and looking at it closely is like taking another step back on Planet Earth. I was drawn to the contrast between its endurance and its fragility, and to the idea of how a piece of coral connects us-through thousands of years, even a hundred thousand years-to things that existed before its reef was first formed. Something similar is revealed when looking at a plant through a microscope and seeing its structure: running through time, through places, through living things, there is commonality.”
“The new paintings I have done, with many concentric colors, are about emotions-and yes, there’s a kind of psychic mapping. When we are children, we all understand about the self, and I guess these paintings are really about exploring that idea, about following a path back to that. When I was three, I remember thinking of myself-my soul and my body-and somehow recognizing some essential core, one I thought I could project in the future. I think it’s probably that same feeling of self and of longing every living creature has, and that all art connects to.”
Extracts from an interview with writer Katherine Hazzard for the PROVINCETOWN ARTS magazine 2023/24.
Meditative Drawings:
These drawings were inspired by coral fragments found on a Miami beach.
Once tiny marine invertebrates, luminous bones, porous and monumental, landscapes with precise borders, these timeless corals harbor striking maps of the interior that make visible the simultaneity of the past and present.
Pasage Series:
These paintings are about mapping emotions about the self and retracing the psychic path we first experience as children, they aim to map our essential core.
About the artist.
Multimedia artist Nathalie Ferrier was born in France and has lived year-round in Truro, Cape Cod since 1999. Recently she started to spend time in Miami in between academic semesters. Miami’s tropical light, plants, architecture, its people and vibes have inspired her to create new works.
Ferrier studied at the Ecole de Haute Couture in Paris and worked for ten years as a fashion designer for Haute Couture. She also created a toy company (Born to be Wild) and designed a line of stuffed animals and wooden toys sold at museum stores throughout the United States.
In 2007, Ferrier received an MFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.
Currently, Ferrier is the Higgins Art Gallery Director and Curator and teaches fiber arts at the Cape Cod Community College.
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday 3:30 - 5:00 at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$240 for the one week session. Call 508-349-0314 or visit www.wellfleet-ma.gov for more information.
Gallery Opening: Margaret Shepherd
Wellfleet Public Library
The Bible's Great Love Poems in Calligraphy
A show of original letter art by Margaret Shepherd
On Display: September 11 - November 3
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 23, 5:00 - 7:00 pm
For more Library events, both in-person and virtual, visit: www.wellfleetlibrary.org/events
A NIGHT WITH ZEHRA KHAN
FARM PROJECTS
A NIGHT WITH ZEHRA KHAN
Farm Projects - 335 Main St
Week Long Drawing Class (Monday through Friday)
Children Ages 7 -14
One week session, Monday through Friday, 9:00 am - 11:00 am, at the Baker’s Field Tent.
Taught by Neal Nichols, Jr., local artist and founder of “Geography Game Show”.
$260 for the one week session. Call 508-349-0314 or visit www.wellfleet-ma.gov for more information.
To Register: email directly to Geographygameshow@yahoo.com
Burdick Art Gallery
Burdick Art Gallery
CELEBRATING 55 YEARS IN WELLFLEET
Summer Hours Wednesday - Sunday 12-6 pm
Saturday Receptions 6-8 pm refreshments served
Joanne, Margaret, Kate, and Anna Burdick
Hosting Wellfleet Artists Nancy Nicol, Monica Rosak and Susan Rosenblatt
25 Bank Street, Wellfleet25 Bank Street, Wellfleet
818-205-7773
Gallery Opening -AMZehnder Gallery
AMZehnder Gallery
New exhibit opens August 19th featuring the works of Gwenn Murphy, Mia Cross, Mitra Walter, Laura Peturson, and Caroline Bowden.
The gallery is open every day except Wednesday, from 11 am - 6 pm. Openings will be on Saturday evenings from 6-8 pm.
AMZehnder Gallery, 25 Bank Street No.3 Wellfleet
(508) 560-8249
Jeff Soderbergh Gallery - Summer Soiree!
Jeff Soderbergh Gallery
Summer Soiree!
Walk our newly expanded gallery, flower and sculpture gardens and meet our talented artists and sculptors while sipping libations.
(plenty of parking available in our lot behind the building)
11 W. Main St.
6:00 - 8:00 pm
Opening Reception: Robert Shreefter and Hanni Woodbury
Off Main Gallery
Robert Shreefter and Hanni Woobury
Opening Reception: Saturday, August 12th at 6 - 8 pm
Off Main Gallery, 75 Commercial St
Gallery Opening - Robert Shreefter & Hanni Woodbury
Off Main Gallery
Robert Shreefter & Hanni Woodbury - Prints on Paper
August 12th - August 30th
Opening Reception: Saturday, August 12th at 6 - 8pm
Burdick Art Gallery
Burdick Art Gallery
CELEBRATING 55 YEARS IN WELLFLEET
Summer Hours Wednesday - Sunday 12-6 pm
Saturday Receptions 6-8 pm refreshments served
Joanne, Margaret, Kate, and Anna Burdick
Hosting Wellfleet Artists Nancy Nicol, Monica Rosak and Susan Rosenblatt
25 Bank Street, Wellfleet
25 Bank Street, Wellfleet
818-205-7773
Project/Project
FARM PROJECTS
Farm Projects is pleased to present PROJECT/PROJECT. This pop-up event features five site-specific projections by Cape Cod artists that will transform twilight for 90 minutes on Friday, August 11th. Participating artists include Janice Redman and Elizabeth Bradfield, Megan Hinton, Elizabeth Giamatti, Traci Harmon-Hay and Bella Hay, and Cole Brash. Megan Hinton’s projection will offer an expansion of the work on view in her current exhibition on view at Farm Projects. All participating artists are encouraged to experiment and improvise to find innovative ways to deepen the ideas and themes central to their individual practices by engaging with local landscapes and architectural features.
Projections will be sited across Wellfleet, including at Farm Projects and Such a Much (355 Main Street), When Studio (The Mooney Building, 95 Commercial Street), and the Wellfleet Pier (255 Commercial Street). Starting at sundown (7:45pm), visitors are invited to walk, bike, or cruise the 0.9 mile stretch between the sites. Maps are available at Farm Projects and a reception will be hosted there as well.
“This inaugural happening has the potential to grow into a recurring event that will help solidify Wellfleet as a home for experimental contemporary art on Cape Cod,” said organizer Susie Nielsen. “Site-specific projections have this magical ability to transform familiar places and help people to see things in a new way. My hope is that this will grow to become an event artists and residents in the area will look forward to as an opportunity to shift their thinking and engagement with this special place.”
Submit An Event
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