
Wiscasset’s Maine Art Gallery was humming with “good vibes,” as many said, from the art and music at the opening reception of “Song of the Wild: Honoring the Natural Beauty and Wildlife of Maine.” One couple walked around the upstairs room and said they felt “as if they were in nature.”
The gallery will offer events and classes designed to expand visitors’ relationship with the natural world during “Song of the Wild,” on view through July 26.
The 10 artists in the show — painters, sculptors and a photographer — have filled the spacious two-floor gallery with 90 works representing the forests, waters and wildlife of Maine.
Eric Hopkins, whose large-scale paintings of the ocean vibrate with lush color, told the crowd that he first came to the gallery as a boy in the 1960s.
“This show is full of great art, wild art, wild artists! Just what it should be,” Hopkins said.
Alice Smith Duncan, an Alna resident also familiar with the gallery’s earliest days through her mother’s involvement, said, “The gallery founder, Miss Mildred Burrage, would have been thrilled to see her vision still being so excitingly fulfilled.”
The 10 artists are Jane Dahmen, known for her large-scale paintings, often of her favorite trees, birches; Matt Barter, painter and sculptor of Maine’s bogs and wetlands; Barbara Sullivan, a 3D fresco artist of midcoast mammals; Katherine Shagas, whose abstract paintings reveal elemental energies; Sara Farragher, an impressionistic painter of glimmering waters; Lesia Sochor, sculptor of 3D animals made of birch bark; Liv Kristin Robinson, photographer of backyard insects; Emily Sabino, whose visionary naturalist paintings depict healing plants and night pollination; and Joy Vaughan, abstract painter of her South Bristol landscape. Dahmen and Sabino, her daughter, co-curated the exhibition.

Barter, a professor of art at Bowdoin who has shown at the gallery before, said, “How could any artist turn down a request to show work about their favorite biome? These walls are vibrating with life.”
Sochor was so thrilled she had sold two of her bark sculptures, a barred owl and a turtle, that she wrote a poem about the two creatures and nature’s interdependence and read it to the crowd.
The music of The Flying Seeds, a folk and Peruvian music-inspired duo of Sabino and her husband, Lenin, was another hit with the crowd. The duo played instruments ranging from a gigantic pan flute to a charango. Cindy McGurl, an artist who has shown at Maine Art Gallery, said the music was “uniquely beautiful.” Eenor’s Sonic Wallpaper also performed electronic and acoustic music.
Related events include a talk by Coastal Rivers Conservation Trust community science director Sara Gladu on “The Impact of Air” from 4:30 to 6 p.m. July 11, and a panel discussion titled “Nature as Muse” on July 16.
Jean Kigel will offer a free demonstration of gyotaku, a traditional method of printing used by Japanese fishermen in the 1800s that has evolved into an art form, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. July 9.
Originally used to record the size of a catch, gyotaku combines “gyo,” meaning fish, and “taku,” meaning rubbing or impression. The process involves applying ink to a fish, pressing rice paper onto it and pulling the paper away to reveal an exact impression. Refreshments will be served.
“Drawing and Painting our Feathered Friends,” a workshop led by Kat Logan, will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 8. The class invites participants of all skill levels to explore the beauty of Maine’s diverse birdlife through drawing and painting. Registration is due by July 3.

Jude Valentine will offer “Charcoal and Line: Drawing the Landscape” from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. July 11. The class explores charcoal as a forgiving and versatile alternative to pencil or graphite drawing.
Valentine will also offer “Composing with Color: Pastel & Mixed Media” from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. July 15. Valentine states that her intention in her classes is to create a visual connection to a quiet place. Registration is due by July 10.

Two free events bring together the worlds of creativity and science. Sara Gladu, naturalist and director of community science at Coastal Rivers Conservation Trust, will explore how air — and the things in it, including light, moisture and pollution — impacts the landscape around us at 4:30 p.m. July 11. A panel talk, “Nature as Muse,” will be held July 16, featuring an author, photographer and painter who will discuss how the natural world inspires them.
The gallery is grateful to First National Bank, sponsor of the gyotaku demonstration; Sherri Dunbar of Tim Dunham Realty, a season sponsor; Ames True Value Hardware, capital sponsor; and Coastal Rivers Conservation Trust, sponsor of the current exhibition.
The Maine Art Gallery is at 15 Warren St., Wiscasset. Hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday through Sunday. Visit maineartgallerywiscasset.org for more information.
Please join the Maine Museum of Photographic Arts on Friday, July 24, from 5-8 pm for an elegant evening of art and ideas. We are hosting a panel discussion with artists in the LOOKING AT YOU exhibition: featuring Jack Montgomery, Barbara Peacock, Richard Wexler, Jan Pieter van Voorst van Beest, Bret Woodard , Arlene Collins […]
Summer is the perfect time to pull out the paints and pencils, and even tissue and glue for experimentation or to develop one’s creative talents. Upcoming classes at the Maine Art Gallery offer three opportunities to expand your abilities. In “Charcoal and Line: Drawing the Landscape,” both intermediate beginners and those with more advanced […]
The Colby College Museum of Art is pleased to announce the gift of Henri Matisse’s Océanie, le ciel, a monumental screenprint on linen conceived in 1946 and printed in 1948. The significant acquisition reinforces Colby’s position as a leading academic art museum and adds to Maine’s growing profile as a major destination for American and […]
Richard Estes (born 1932) is best known for his complex photo-realistic images of urban shop windows and their mind-eye confounding reflections. However, his work also attests to a well-traveled eye for distant places, including Mount Desert Island and Lake Champlain. While helping Alice Walton select artworks destined for the permanent collection of Crystal Bridges […]
Waterfall Arts in Belfast invites the community to explore creativity, craftsmanship and collective imagination through PLAY, a season of workshops, exhibitions and special events featuring nationally recognized artists Valeska Populoh and Mark Matthews. From illuminated lantern parades to crafted glass spheres, the visiting artists bring decades of experience and a shared belief that art has […]
The Center for Maine Contemporary Art in Rockland has named Rori Smith as its new director of education. Smith brings nearly two decades of experience as an educator, scholar and artist, having worked with institutions including the Penn Museum, the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, the National Museum of the American Indian and […]
Kittery Art Association presents “Lucid Coastline” through Aug. 2 at its gallery in Kittery. The exhibition explores the many ways artists interpret the shifting moods of the coast. From abstraction to realism, each work reveals a personal dialogue with nature’s edge — the lucid space between the tangible and the transcendent. An opening reception was […]
Jean Kigel Studio + Gallery in Waldoboro is currently featuring “Patchwork,” an oil painting by Jean Kigel. A few years ago, Kigel was one of 11 artists chosen to spend a day painting on Allen Island, six miles off Port Clyde. “I had passed this bleak island many times en route to Monhegan and had […]
The Union of Maine Visual Artists will present “Dreaming at Dawn,” an exhibition inspired by daybreak in Maine, from Aug. 1 to Sept. 30 at Bangor Public Library. The exhibition features 68 pieces by 51 artists from across the state, with work installed in the library’s Cyr, Stairwell and Lecture Hall galleries. Interpretations of the […]
Receive news and information about Maine artists and events delivered right to your inbox.