This summer season’s final profile discussing the work of artist members of the Pemaquid Art Gallery looks at two highly accomplished, masterful Bristol artists who could both be called romantic realists but have a surprisingly different feeling to their painting.
Patti Leavitt and Barbara Applegate are experienced, well-known painters who use different mediums — Leavitt exclusively pastel and Applegate mainly oil — to present richly colorful, light-infused, detailed and beautiful scenes of the world around them.
Because the Pemaquid Art Gallery didn’t open this summer due to the pandemic, the gallery has been highlighting members’ work, which can be viewed and purchased online at pemaquidartgallery.com.
Leavitt summers in Bristol and winters in Bonita Springs, Florida, and shows her work in both places—the Pemaquid gallery here and at the Center for the Arts in Bonita Springs. She has received several awards in juried shows and in Maine is a longtime favorite with visitors to the Pemaquid Gallery. She grew up in a family of artists and cannot remember when she wasn’t painting and drawing.
Leavitt has a broad range of subject matter, featuring farm scenes, Maine’s quaint coastal villages, woodlands, seascapes and still lifes, all familiar focuses of Maine artists. But her skill with pastels produces rich, deep colors and strong, intense shadows, often verging on an expressionistic creation of drama. Her bales of hay can be strongly backlit or picked out with suffused, dark shadows, her seascapes often share this use of intense shadows and even her beautifully detailed still lifes have a bold drama in their static, rich, powerful depiction of color and the play of light on colorful surfaces. Her love of rich color rewards the eye in all her work.
Applegate’s subject matter may be almost the same as Leavitt’s, but what a difference in style and feeling. Applegate has a strong public presence on the internet and a highly informative, sophisticated website with very useful instructive videos for artists. She has painted for 30 years and has been actively teaching art since 2001 using workshops, online instruction and many other means to “instruct and entertain,” as she puts its, aspiring artists.
She has a studio in Bristol Mills and shows in Brunswick at the Bayview Gallery, in Chatham, Massachusetts, at the Chatham Fine Art Gallery and in Lambertville, New Jersey at the Highlands Art Gallery. She has an extensive list of exhibitions and awards and has been the subject of numerous articles in national art journals.
She was born in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and was influenced by the realism traditions of the great painters of that area, including Maine’s own Andrew Wyeth. She originally painted in the Delaware River area but relocated to Maine in 1996, escaping encroaching urban expansion.
Her paintings are realistic and often suffused with romanticism and nostalgia. Their dappled light and short, broken brush strokes create a strong impressionistic feeling of a gentle, light-filled atmosphere. Even in the powerful seascapes with windswept spray, there is a fascination with how light dances on the water.
As with Leavitt, her subject matter is broad-ranging, including landscapes, quaint village scenes, seascapes, interiors and still lifes, as well as animal portraits and figure paintings. She paints detailed interiors with vases of flowers on tables draped with cloths, with finely depicted play of light unifying the scenes. Her dramatic sky paintings link the viewer to the grandeur and romance of nature, while the quaint village scenes of flowers and cottages create another romantic nostalgia for a peaceful past. What a rich visual feast is presented by both of these painters.
Harbor Square Gallery in Camden is showing new work by Thomas O’Donovan, the jeweler and artistic director who founded the gallery more than four decades ago. On view is “Revelation,” from his series The Offering, crafted in 18k gold and bronze with antique coconut heishi beads. Harbor Square Gallery is at 37 Bay View St., […]
The Deer Isle Artists Association gallery welcomes North Carolina-based painter Tony Griffin as artist-in-residence for April. Griffin’s work — deeply rooted in the tradition of the Renaissance masters — spans portraiture, figure painting and plein air landscape. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia and has exhibited throughout North Carolina […]
Waterfall Arts in Belfast opens “Make Your Mark,” an immersive, community-driven exhibition transforming the Clifford Gallery into an interactive space inspired by street art, April 18 through May 29. An opening reception is April 18 from 1 to 3 p.m. and is free and open to the public. The exhibition features participatory installations including doodle […]
Local Color Gallery in Belfast welcomes fiber artist Sarah Leighton as guest artist April 21 through May 17. Leighton will speak about her work during Fourth Friday Gallery Night on April 25 from 4 to 7 p.m., with her talk beginning at 5 p.m. Leighton grew up in Midcoast Maine, where her French-Canadian grandmother — […]
The Union of Maine Visual Artists presents “Bodies in Motion,” an exhibition of work in various media at Zoot Coffee in Camden, running April 1 through 30. The show features 19 artists: Hillary Steinau, Cynthia Motian McGuirl, Jess Lauren Lipton, Charlie Newton, Maryjean Viano Crowe, Mackenzie Martin, Jorge Pena, Rachel Robbins, Shanna McNair, Kristi Marsh, […]
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Maine Art Gallery in Wiscasset has shaped its 2026 exhibition season around the ways artists respond to the natural world and Maine’s place in the sustainable agriculture movement. The season opens with “Art to Table: Visual Sustenance,” a juried show examining individual and communal relationships to food through works that elevate ingredients, meals and rituals. […]
Meetinghouse Arts kicked off the season with a creative conversation featuring artist Charlie Hewitt on March 18, partnering with Freeport Community Services for the evening event. Hewitt is known for his Hopeful Project, a glowing installation originally commissioned by Speedwell in 2019 that has since spread to dozens of sites. The gallery also hosted a […]
George Marshall Store Gallery in York opened “Block Party!” on March 15, bringing together artists living, working or with ties to York, Kittery, Eliot, South Berwick, Ogunquit and Wells. The open-call exhibition featured a wide variety of mediums, experimental approaches and interpretations of local landmarks. The show included work by Karen Adrienne, Marena Bach, Todd […]
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