
a late night update...
a big *smooch* to rainer
for helping me set the new
banner for the blog ...
do you like it? let me know!
it is our garden last sunday
after the snow. i will update it
each season as it changes.
veilen danke, schatzy!
American Kitty
Monday wake up call!
Who is that green faced woman?
Sunday Supplement

Artist Profile:
Felted items
Porcelain Sculpture 



^ "You rascal!" (didn't Amalie plant those gnomes in our brains everywhere?)
^ "The round peg in the rectangular hole"... nope that doesn't REALLY translate ... cute though.

^ This one is totally universal ... keep your sunny side UP! ...

^ "After every night there is a morning" ... hee hee hee
... and finally, my personal favorite below ... "These boards mean the world to me" ... boards in this useage mean the stage floor.
The word for today, (because it is Friday) is ... Footloose ... as in dancing, fancy free - and
... go have some fun!





elf, she knows what she is capturing first hand. Affordable? You bet, $150 so you can gift yourself and your valentine. Visit us at artstream to veiw a few more and stop in for the real thing.
What came first, the chicken or the pear?
They are fine paintings. Yes, they are not your trendy folk art chicken prints for the kitchen. These proud birds beg you to speak with them. Look closely, doesn't that one with the fluffy topknot remind you of one of the queens from a small European country you studied in fifth grade? She certainly outclasses her mate in every way. They make you look at the world of fowl so differently, that each painting and wood cut print she creates brings something new to the plate. Ooops! I do not mean for dinner ... hang one of these on your wall - ok - in the kitchen if you must, and enjoy the wit and wisdom of the not so lowly bird. These are truly beautifully executed paintings of chickens. One of a kind. Just like people. They are priced around $200 and below and most are framed. Cynthia's flock can be seen at artstreamstudios.com and she also has some woodcut prints over in South Berwick, ME at Emporium Gallery. Go ahead take a peck ... umm, peek. We always have a few of her birds on hand. Which is far better than the bush. Any Bush I can think of.
"A cup of sake, a morsel of sushi and thou...." Nick Park has a way with still life. He brings the viewer to the table of life and compels you to sit down and stay a while. This oil painting is 38" square and is framed in a floating black frame.
Pickstitch! I met this stitch on a beautifully designed skirt and blouse by Cynthia Designs of Dover, NH this week. I had to show you what it looked like up close because I find it so amazing. Most people tell me that they can not draw a straight line. I tell them I can't sew a straight line ... but now I know something which has to be even harder ... Hand sewing a curly line! Cynthia is a woman of many talents. She creates clothing based on textures, patterns, line and color. She is an artist of the fabric world. Her one of a kind clothing is fashionable, funky and full of life. Each have a title and story behind them. The details are astounding and her combinations of color/texture and shape of garment are more than unique. By now are you are wondering why I am not showing you the entire outfit? Simple! You must come see for yourself. (or wait to see the photos afterwards) We are having an Art to Wear/Home Design show on April 15th from 11 to 4 p.m. at artstream.
Ah February...the time when having sculpture in your backyard makes the midwinter thaw seem like summer just isn't that far away. Here is something to ponder whilst the snow turns to mud again near your herb garden. "Down the Drain" by Jerry Glynn. A sculpture which had a home in a backyard at the beach... until Alison Cleveland called us up and told us about this humble quiet man. We drove down to the beach and found Jerry. His yard and home were filled with these fantastical, found object sculptures. This work "Down the Drain" stands 4 feet tall and is perfectly at home in a large foyer or backyard gathering further patina. Jerry has a knack for seeing modern machines and antiquated human forms in bits of wire, draincovers, driftwood, nuts and bolts and whatever else washes up from the Atlantic. See, Jerry finds his materials on the beach. Has for years. Keeps them in a storage area in his backyard until he needs just that piece. That day always seems to come for him too. While we were touring his personal museum I came across a small sculpture which I felt needed a new home - mine. When I asked Jerry what the piece was called, Jerry said he didn't really have a name, but somehow I already knew his name: "Java Man" So Java Man came home with me
that day and has peered through his monocular eye fingering his wild mane of telephone wire now for over two years. He speaks to the part of us all who wants to take a bit of this and a bit of that and become much more than the sum of our parts.
Red is a warm and powerful color. It can overpower most everything around it. That is why when my husband and I went in search of a couch for our new house we were not thinking about the color red. We sat on, bounced around on, lay down on, and ran around more couches than either the sales people at the furniture stores would care to remember and more than I care to tell you about. But there it was. In it's sexy (read durable) microsuede self. Deep and soft, wide enough for a great snuggle and afternoon nap. Yes, this was the one. Looks and quality to fit my designer husband's needs and color and comfort I just had to have. But three months later, our freshly painted "kettle pond" wall above it was still just "kettle pond" Nothing in our collection of artwork could sit above this red beauty and compete. Until May. Enter Dustan Knight with her Metal/Petal exhibition last April at our gallery. Our walls were filled with the most vibrant huge floral and woodland watercolor paintings. Yes, watercolor. I know that you are looking at the piece above and thinking where is the frame? Dustan paints very large scale works (and some small ones too!) which she mounts through a process she has devised onto a wooden cradle support. She has a finish which she applies to them which protect them from UV damage as well. The whole process is so unique that she has created a videotape with instructions for other artists to learn the process by. This painting we were gifted after doing a photoshoot for Dustan of the exhibition. In choosing the piece, I didn't have the couch in mind. No artist does, sadly. The piece is 40 by 40 inches and is filled with a rose colored woods. It is filled with brightly colored branches and soft red mist. It is calm and quiet. It is red. My couch loves it and lives in harmony with it. My two girls are convinced that the faeries live behind the chartreuse tree. Dustan's paintings range from huge florals which we have shown to scenes of fantastic animals with children riding them to woodlands and water. She is a painter who came from the NYC expressionistic movement and keeps that edge in most of the works I have seen. Need to see more? Go to her website at dustanknight.com or stop by the gallery this summer. We will have some of her brand new larger than life florals splashing up the place through labor day. She will also be offering workshops with us at the studio gallery - stay tuned!

Contrasts, comparisons, and powerful images.
are my second favorites with Matthew's work. Matthew also dabbles heavily in film. He swept the short film festival, (in the two catagories he could win in), which we held in November 05 , entitled filmstream. He is a man of many talents and we should keep our eye on him... great things are about to happen!
Ahhh Tuscany... this is one of many Italian landscape paintings from Eve Corey. Eve paints from the hip, makes fabulous sense of skyscapes and landscapes from Italy to The Fox Run Mall in Newington, NH and Floridian pools to engaging British rolling hills.


