Driving America's Art Scene - Hunterdon County, NJ USA

Covered Bridge Artisans

Covered Bridge Artisans

Covered Bridge Artisans

Covered Bridge Artisans

Various

 

 

Covered Bridge Artisans will be open Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 10 AM to 5 PM.

Sergeantsville Firehouse Event Center, 761 Sergeantsville Rd., Sergeantsville 08557

(609) 397-1535

The Covered Bridge Artisans Studio Tour is a self-guided driving tour visiting artists in their studios within five miles of Stockton, NJ in southern Hunterdon County. The tour was established in 1993 and hosts eight open studios in Lambertville, Stockton, Sergeantsville and Solebury, PA. An additional fourteen artists exhibit their work at the Sergeantsville Firehouse Event Center. Work that is shown includes pottery, sculpture, paintings, fused and stained glass, jewelry, wood-turning, weaving, basketry, quilts, ceramics, bookbinding, photography and blown glass.

Artist / Website / Above Image:

Jerry Bennett — www.jerrybennett.net  (red ceramic vase)

Diana Contine — www.dakota-moon.com  (pendant green drop necklace)

Lynn Ebeling —  no web presence (basket)

Sheila Fernekes — https://sheilafernekesdesign.com  (Santa Fe beaded necklace)

Penelope Fleming — www.penelopefleming.com (neo-Raku wall hanging)

Carol Heisler-Lawson — www.carolheisler-lawson.com (rainbow splash quilt)

Bernard Hohlfeld — www.roundwood.studio  (resin & burl hollow vessel)

Justin Long — www.justinlongart.com/sculpture (blaze metal sculpture)

Don Schoenleber — www.dwschoenleber.com (photography)

Lynnette Shelley — www.lynnetteshelley.com (Dive – mixed media painting)

Mindy Trost — www.cartabooks.com (large sketchbook)

Amy Turner — www.amyturnerhandweaving.com  (fine rayon scarves)

Helena van Emmerik-Finn — www.hvefinn.com  (pastel painting)

Susan Wechsler — www.swpottery.com (ceramic platter)

 

In Studio Artists:

Bill Jersey Studio
Bill Jersey
www.billjersey.com

Bonetown Studio
Jeanine Pennell
www.bonetownstudio.com

Moorland Studio
Constance Bassett & David Cann
www.moorlandstudios.com

New Hope Glass Studio
Jill & Dan Burstein
www.newhopestainedglass.com

John Petach Fine Art Studio
John Petach
www.johnpetach.com

Sunflower Glass Studio
Karen & Geoff Caldwell
www.SunflowerGlassStudio.com

van Dommelen Art Studio
Annelies van Dommelen
www.vandommelenart.com

The 28th Annual Fall Studio Tour will take place Thanksgiving Weekend, 2022.

 

McNamara

McNamara

Terri McNamara

Terri McNamara

Mixed Media

 

The Large Glass

Terri’s studio will be open to the public on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

450 Cokesbury Road, Annandale, NJ 08801

(908) 323-3376

Terri McNamara is a nurse, a mom, an artist, a musician and a writer. She has a fierce sense of commitment to anything she puts her mind to. Terri holds a number of degrees from English to Nursing and is even finishing a Master’s degree as you read this. She grew up watching her father paint and her mother make ceramics and their family farm was never without an abundance of studio materials, other artists or music.

Thomas

Thomas

Ann Thomas

Ann Thomas

Painting

 

Ann’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

23 Sanford Road, Stockton, NJ 08559

(609) 731-5857

I am compelled by the discovery and the infinite possibilities of putting paint on a flat surface.

Working in oils, and preferring to work large, I paint landscapes based on places I know well in Hunterdon County. I also enjoy getting lost in the freedom and energy of the looser style of abstraction.

When something in the natural world attracts my attention with enough impact, I decide to capture it with paint. The ideas are presented in the work through color, paint application and movement throughout the piece. I hope the journey I take while painting extends to the viewer as well.

Pennell

Pennell

Jeanine Pennell

Jeanine Pennell

Sculpture

 

Bonetown Studio

Jeanine’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 10 AM to 5 PM.

16 Green Farm Lane, Stockton, NJ 08559

(908) 797-9356

At age 50 I disrupted the status quo of my day to day and stepped into my creative life. My figurative sculptures are a record of that process.

I create an imaginary world filled with people and creatures who are confident in their eccentricity. My art celebrates the weird and quirky side of our personalities. It’s that part we try hard to hide from others, but in reality it’s the side that makes us special. Makes us stand out from the crowd. Our secret superpower, so to speak.

I hand sculpt each one in kiln fired paperclay. Each face is hand painted in layered underglazes to create a worn and weathered feeling, as a reminder of the impermanence of things. I am reminded of the comfort that worn and well used objects bring to my life.

My sculptures are not perfect, I am always learning. But they are a real reminder to give one’s self the permission to be yourself and to follow a dream.

Mistichelli

Mistichelli

Tracy Mistichelli

Tracy Mistichelli

Painting

 

Tracy Mistichelli Art

Tracy’s studio will be open to the public on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

464 Main Street, Three Bridges, NJ 08887

(908) 507-4523

Tracy was born and raised in New Jersey and has no plans of leaving her roots. She currently lives and works out of her studio in Three Bridges. The garden state has inspired her to paint landscapes, ocean waters and the rural farms of Hunterdon County. Most days you will find her in her studio, paintbrush in hand, swaying to music and living out her passion.

Tracy Mistichelli started painting as a hobby, never thinking she would take it to another level. When she decided to commit, she started taking classes at the Hunterdon Art Museum and studied with various instructors gaining valuable knowledge and skill painting in oils. Tracy became so proficient with her playful paintings of flowers, landscapes, seascapes, nudes and animals she was able to sell them through various design centers throughout New Jersey.

Having achieved this success, Tracy decided she needed to step outside her comfort zone. She is currently being mentored by Terri Fraser who has shown even more ways to play with oil paints. Tracy has found new freedom and confidence allowing her to explore the world of abstraction.

Miller, MaryAnn L.

Miller, MaryAnn L.

MaryAnn L. Miller

MaryAnn L. Miller

Mixed Media

 

Lucia Studio

MaryAnn’s studio will be open to the public on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 4 PM.

18 George’s Place, Clinton, NJ 08809

(908) 391-0347

The work has become its own inspiration. It has become less a partnership with randomness and more an intentional harnessing of design elements. I compose as I go along keeping my developing design as a guide to what will come next. I have faith that each choice will lead to the correct arrangement. This work is as identity free as I can make it.

Miller, Colleen

Miller, Colleen

Colleen Miller

Colleen Miller

Mixed Media

 

Green Cottage Studios

Colleen’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11AM to 5 PM and Sunday, May 1 from noon to 5 PM.

Canal Center, 278 North Union Street, Suite 108, Lambertville, NJ 08530

(609) 468-1494

My mixed media art represents a visual language that I use as a bridge to communicate emotions to the viewer. My goal is for the viewer to be able to access my internal worldview through my artwork.

Throughout all the mediums that I use to do artwork, there are several common threads. My style centers around richly detailed, layered images which engage the viewer and encourage him/her to spend time absorbing more than the surface level. I frequently refer to my style as “more” – I use more tools, more techniques, and more visual components to bring depth to the pieces. I employ colorful patterns to strike at the viewers’ emotions and I obsess over the details. I believe if viewer’s see all of the parts, patterns and details, it brings a more comprehensive and emotional image to bear.

I don’t limit myself to specific tools or mediums. To me, mixed media equals freedom.

Colleen grew up in New Jersey and currently resides in Lawrence and has a studio in Lambertville. She exhibits in local shows and has work in local retail shops. Colleen also volunteers for HomeFront’s Artspace.

Lindsay

Lindsay

Bruce Lindsay

Bruce Lindsay

Sculpture

 

Integral Sculpture Works

Bruce’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11AM to 5 PM.

100 Rocktown Lambertville Road, Lambertville, NJ 08530

(215) 208-1711

Bruce Lindsay’s sculpture takes familiar objects from nature and by changing their material through the arduous process of casting in metal and glass produces artworks that arrest the sense of loss that the passage of time can bring. Items on the brink of decay, such as driftwood and leaves are rendered permanent in stainless steel and bronze. Their moment of departure in the crucible of casting is meticulously recorded in materials that are profoundly permanent.

Jourjine

Jourjine

Ruth Jourjine

Ruth Jourjine

Ceramics

 

Ruth’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11AM to 5 PM.

123 Raven Rock Road, Stockton, NJ 08559

(609) 933-4535

Clay is the main component of my recent sculpture. The color process is also an important element where I use oil stain and various paint methods depending on the pattern in my mind. I am inspired by the endless amount of repeating patterns I see in nature from the woods to under my microscope.

At this point I like to counter the fragile fired clay with cement, stone or wood to anchor the sculpture. I also use bolts and metal both for support but also a reflection of visits to natural history museums where “specimens” are pierced and poked for display. With contrast in materials I push to add tension to the finished sculpture that reflects both on how fragile life is but also durable.

Irvine

Irvine

James Irvine

James Irvine

Mixed Media

 

James’ studio will be open to the public on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

6 Hunting Hills Road, Annandale, NJ 08801

(908) 432-0904

My goal is to create art that pulls people in, by exploring the tension between opposing forces of natural and the abstract, the emotional and the representational. To achieve a tension between layers of paint, color, white space and mark-making which produces something a bit unexpected, drawing the viewer in, to look a little closer until they almost touch it.

Huhn

Huhn

Valerie Huhn

Valerie Huhn

Mixed Media

 

Valerie’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 2 PM and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

47 Leffer Hill Road, Flemington, NJ 08822

(212) 227-7055

People have used fingerprints for mark-making since the earliest recorded days of civilization. Yet fingerprints today are far more likely to be used for marking others than for stamping a claim of ownership or creation. They are most widely employed by the police and forensic labs, banking institutions, and government health services. Of course, interpreting these prints is an art in itself. And for all their apparent individual information, fingerprints tell us nothing about gender, age, race, income, or anything else about a person that can be used for enforcing social constructs that define categories of oppression.

Where fingerprints were once used as a symbolic action of pride, they have now become a passive action—we are fingerprinted. I am interested in bringing humanity back to the fingerprint—whether in obsessive repetitious patterns or the intimate setting of a personal bureau that houses our second skin.

The fingerprint work in this series is created with my right index finger. Each print is catalogued with the date it was created beneath it. The work revolves around identity—identifying and categorizing people into groups and subgroups within society.

It is the notion of a fixed self or our identification of others that I am challenging by the use of color, shape, and pressure of every print I create—along with its accompanying date.

Green

Green

Aylin Green

Aylin Green

Mixed Media

 

Aylin Green Studio

Aylin’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

100 Rocktown Lambertville Road, Lambertville, NJ 08530

(609) 933-7441

My art centers on exploring mythologies, dreams, scientific theories, and interpretations of events while gathering inspiration from the crusty tables of flea markets, the sewing boxes of fashionable women, and the colorful graffiti of city streets.

In many of my sculptures I play with multiple expressions of gender identity. The basic form is a pillow — an intimate object made solely for the purpose of the body’s comfort. You sense the absence of the person through the depression in the center but the object itself becomes a metaphor for the body. Layers of meaning are added through the use of crochet, lace, and the material of metal.

My mixed media paintings often tell a story, either real or imagined, through texture, imagery, and color. Many are based on vintage imagery of contortionists and circus performers with a mystical and otherworldly influence. These women are simultaneously acting and acted upon by their environment. They are the givers and the takers, the protectors and the warriors. Whatever is asked of them, they perform. The challenge is thrown down, and they take it up.

Bio:
Aylin Green is a mixed media artist, community organizer, educator, and curator. She has exhibited her sculpture and paintings at traditional and alternative art venues throughout the region for the last 20 years, and her work is held in many private collections. Public art projects have included murals in the city of Trenton and the grant funded “Trenton Art Puzzle” project.

Aylin holds a MA Ed from School of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston/Tufts and a BFA in Sculpture from Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University. She currently serves as the Executive Director of the West Windsor Arts Council and is a longtime resident of Lambertville, NJ.

Eick

Eick

Eleanor Eick

Eleanor Eick

Painting

 

Eleanor’s studio will be open to the public on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM. 

Whittemore–CCC, 7 Rockaway Road, Oldwick, NJ 08858

(347) 907-3142

I have loved painting with watercolor since taking continuing education classes at NYC art schools starting in the mid nineties. I was lucky to live near the Brooklyn Botanic Garden and had my first plein air experiences there.

My wife and I moved to Hunterdon County in 2006. I made my first local paintings at The Prallsville Mill. I joined the Hunterdon Watercolor Society, The Musconetcong Watercolor Group and have taken many classes at the the Center for Contemporary Art.

I have been influenced by Gail Bracegirdle and Doris Ettlinger in traditional techniques. Wes Sherman and Terri Fraser have directed me towards appreciation of all things contemporary.

I usually start by taking a walk with paper, pencil, materials in a backpack, a folding chair and table. I appreciate being outdoors but I love having a reason to be exploring; just breathing, observing, listening. I try to be open to the feeling to stop walking. It is something intuitive that tells me to paint whatever is in front of me at that moment. I hope it is a place that has meaning, even if I do not know what that will be.

The challenge is satisfying when I find movement in a layout, values and colors with a warm, limited pallet. I try not overthinking about all the design elements I have studied. The enjoyment of looking, being in a flow, is the main reason to be there. My work shows pathways and flowing elements, soft, heart throbbing rhythms.
The changing light will push me to work with fast brush strokes so, happily, tight rendering is not an option.

Sometimes I take my walks with only paper and pencil. I’ll get back to the car with just a loose sketch with shading and notes about color. I’ll set up at the open trunk of the car to paint or go home to the studio and work from memory. This makes a very different painting; a hybrid between there and here.

The painting may end up in the pile of not great work or get framed and put up on the wall. All of them, worth being shown or not, are memories of how I spent that day and what was accomplished. They are a timeline story of where I have been.

In my studio I also love making collages, and will work with originals and/or copies of my paintings, as well as other materials. I usually have elements of paintings that interest me so I start with those. Then I try moving images around like puzzle pieces (without an image on the box to refer to) and take lots of breaks and see where the combining process takes me when I get back to the table with a new idea.

Cann

Cann

David Cann

David Cann

Sculpture

 

Moorland Studios

David’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM. 

25 South Main Street, Stockton, NJ 08559

(609) 462-8650

Deconstructing and Metamorphis of Iron to a New and Organic Visual Language.

 

This oeuvre is the exploration of the process of deconstructing the idea of how we perceive steel as a material.

I am using traditional metal-forming processes that would be employed to precisely manipulate this material into specific shapes for functional purposes. By changing the way this tooling is used and by making my own tooling I am able to make shapes and textures that are not traditionally produced. My query is to find new organic and raw shapes for an alternative language in this rigid material.

The  pieces in this series of work explore compositions of form, texture, balance and movement to create a natural or organic vocabulary.

Although some of the pieces have titles that may allude to a known visual reference. Titling is a result of observation after assembly rather than a predetermined intention. It is important to me that any visual reference is implied and not literal and open to the viewers interpretation.

Bassett

Bassett

Constance Bassett

Constance Bassett

Painting

 

Moorland Studios

Constance’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

25 South Main Street, Stockton, NJ 08559

(609) 462-8544

Most of my life, I have been a representational artist, painter and sculptor. However with the rapid changes unfolding in the world, I began to embrace stylizing and abstraction as a way to explore composition and raw feelings without the encumbrance of representation. However, a year into the pandemic the peonies blooming in the garden became the subject and the symbol of “sheltering in place” with these exquisite beauties as well as the awareness of their brevity in the natural world.

Trubert

Trubert

Elie Porter Trubert

Elie Porter Trubert

Sculpture

 

Elie’s studio will be open to the public on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

Whittemore–CCC, 7 Rockaway Road, Oldwick, NJ 08858

(908) 246-5789

Parenting and career rendered my creative practice nearly non-existent for decades until a crisis inspired a new body of work exploring intergenerational trauma. That work became the centerpiece of “Nature/Nurture,” an exhibition I curated of six generations of artists in my family at M Galleries. While previously hand-painted photography was my medium, this new work was primarily sculptural, made of natural materials found on walks and inspired by nature where I take refuge from the world and am alone with thoughts that directly inform the work.

From that point forward I prioritized my practice and carved out more time for it. I have been actively exhibiting over the past three years and in 2020 my first solo exhibition, “The Great Beyond,” took place. This was an audiovisual installation exploring what happens when we die, inspired by the death of my own father. Last year, “Wishful” took place. The title referenced my wishful or magical thinking represented by work created during the pandemic. A series of talismans and magic wands were inspired by my first visit to The Met when it reopened after a prolonged COVID closure, and my desire for things to be other than they were. In the center of the gallery I created a large circular installation or Mandala comprised of bark, sand, stones, and other objects collected on my wanderings. For the past year I have been drawn to the circle as form and process.

Driven by a deep connection to nature, interest in ecology, the environment, and non-traditional and non-exclusionary ways to present and experience art, I have started creating site specific work in public parks using materials found on site. This work is accessible to anyone who visits the park, anonymous, cannot be commodified, and is not obviously “art.” Beginning in spring 2022 I will create four seasons of site specific environmental work at Whittemore – Community, Culture & Conservation, a 180-acre preserve in Oldwick, NJ which will allow me to go much deeper into this type of work.

Art•Venture

Art•Venture

Art•Venture

Art•Venture

Painting

 

Art•Venture will be open Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

2 Stangl Road, Flemington, NJ 08822

(908) 894-2176

Art•Venture is a non-profit arts organization composed of painters, photographers, plein air artists and other creatives living, working and exhibiting in the Flemington, NJ area. Launched in 2019, the group holds regular members’ art shows at Factory Fuel Co. Coffee House, along with figure drawing sessions, art classes, a plein air meetup, annual Plein Air Festival and more art events and instructional series.

 

Fifty members strong and counting, the group has an inaugural Juried Art Show planned for July 2022, and is dedicated to continuing their mission of building a thriving arts community in the Flemington area.

Sky’s the Limit Artist Reception – Saturday, APRIL 30, 3 PM to 5 PM

Artists will be in the gallery welcoming visitors to view the artwork of “Sky’s the Limit” while enjoying refreshments. Don’t miss this chance to join art enthusiasts and collectors to meet the artists, learn about their inspiration/process and be part of the local fine art community!

 

For more information visit artventurenj.com.

Lambrix

Lambrix

Todd Lambrix

Todd Lambrix

Mixed Media

 

The Large Glass

Todd’s studio will be open to the public on Sunday from 11 AM to 5 PM.

450 Cokesbury Road, Annandale, NJ 08801

(201) 320-1452

The works I chose for this studio tour are a response to the pandemic, isolation and loneliness. I have always drawn every day in one form or another. These cards allowed me to respond to an image of a person… one who sat still for a very long time in order to be captured on film. It was a moment of lengthy pause. I am reacting to their faces and what I can glean from their emotions and placing them in isolated or protected situations. The work very closely relates to my other interests in science, systems, connections and the absurd.

Norton

Norton

David Norton

David Norton

Photography

 

The Corner 

David’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM

52 Main Street, Flemington, NJ 08822

(908) 854-3166

I like playing games with what my eyes see. Is there a gap between what we perceive and what exists in the real world? Can things we all see every day be looked at differently? If you pose enough grandiose rhetorical questions at the start of an artists statement, does anyone actually finish it? Who’s to say, really?

I’m a landscape photographer. I am a street photographer. I am a product photographer. I am a newborn photographer. I am a portrait photographer.

I am a needle threader. I spend most of my days working with people who need better photos of themselves but don’t know the first thing about how to make that happen. So they come to me. I combine a love for getting to know new people and finding out what makes them an interesting person with my refined technical skills, which basically boils down to using some lights to make them look great. And then I thread the needle. Enough awareness of my camera, and what is happening, but not quite enough to be intimidated or afraid.

My job is done when someone looks at their photo and says “I don’t look that good in real life” and never before then. Because of course they do. They just don’t get to see it every day.

Horowitz

Horowitz

David Horowitz

David Horowitz

Sculpture

 

David Horowitz Studio

David’s studio will be open Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 10 AM to 6 PM.

207 Milford Road, Frenchtown, NJ 08825

(917) 743-2210

My work uses found objects, both natural and human-made.  I combine the pieces I find in a stacking and balancing construction. I do not weld or use glue.  I use this “stacking” method to create my sculptures in order to emphasize the concept of balance. Balance is required in order to live our lives in a healthy way, both emotionally and physically. It is imperative that there be balance between humans and nature / our environment. Some of my favorite objects to use are springs, because they demonstrate how precarious life can be, and because they embody potential energy.

The fact that the objects which make up my sculptures are not bound together means that the sculptures must be broken down into their individual parts in order to be moved. This requires the buyers to put the sculptures back together wherever they wish them to be displayed. This simple act creates a bond between the owner and the sculpture, and between the owner and me (the original sculptor).

My woodcarving assemblages are also based on balance. I strictly use primitive hand tools to create a dialogue between myself and the wood in its natural form. Using hand tools rather than power tools allows me to bring out the form I see through feeling it with my hands. In a world of mass production, AI, robots and 3D printing, I walk in the opposite direction. Each piece I make is truly one-of-a-kind, a completely unique creation of balance and beauty.

Fulwood

Fulwood

John Fulwood

John Fulwood

Ceramics

 

Kissimmee River Pottery

John’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM

50 Mine Street, Flemington, NJ 08822

(908) 237-0671

I have been making functional pottery for more than forty years and still find myself fascinated by the movement of the clay as I work with it. Although I have specific ideas about function, I believe that you have to allow the clay to have some control, some freedom of movement within the form, if you want your pots to have life. Each pot evolves gradually as I try to maintain a harmonious balance between the form and its function.

This will be a group show. My students will participate too.

Wright

Wright

Douglas Wright

Douglas Wright

Woodworking

 

Douglas Wright Furnituremaker

Doug’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

50 Kingwood Avenue, Frenchtown, NJ 08825

(908) 996-7025

I’m an engineer by degree, and an artist/craftsperson at heart. My engineering education was at Carnegie Mellon University, and my artistic education has been an ongoing proposition, including a one-year apprenticeship with noted furniture designer Jeffrey Greene. I think this combination provides a good base for creating furniture that is not only aesthetically interesting, but is also functional and has structural integrity. I love the whole process – sketching a concept, working out the design details, and bringing the piece to life in the shop.

My design interests generally lie in creating pieces with simple, straightforward lines. I prefer working with North American hardwoods such as black walnut, cherry, and figured maple, usually saving imported exotics for details and accents. Stone, glass, and other materials also find their way into my designs. I feel very fortunate to live in this area, which has a rich artistic tradition and a thriving community of artisans. The result is an environment that provides a constant source of inspiration for design and quality craftsmanship.

1980 – B.S., Civil Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
1993 – 1994 – Apprenticeship with Jeffrey Greene in New Hope, PA
1994 – 2005 – Full-time artisan – YAY! – working out of my shop in Frenchtown, NJ
and doing numerous shows annually, including the Philadelphia Furniture Show and
others
2005 – Present – A good mix of furniture making and environmental consulting

Schwarzenberger

Schwarzenberger

Mary Schwarzenberger

Mary Schwarzenberger

Mixed Media

 

Mary Schwarzenberger Fiber Art

Mary’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 10 AM to 6 PM, and Sunday, May 1 from 10 AM to 4 PM.

59 Bridge Street, Milford, NJ 08848 

(908) 625-7827

In my fiber art, I try to create moods with color and texture that sooth or stimulate. Dyeing silk fabric in a palette of aqua and ocean colors provides raw material for exploration of texture in fabric. Manipulation of the surface using a faux-chenille technique replicates the overlapping ripples and waves in a body of water. A continuing theme in my work is fascination with the sea. The ocean’s ability to engage all of the senses and instill calm and exhilaration simultaneously is a never-ending source of solace.

Adams

Adams

Cay Maria Adams

Cay Maria Adams

Painting

 

Cay Maria’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday from 10 AM to 6 PM and on Sunday from 10 AM to 4 PM.

59 Bridge Street, 2nd Floor, Milford, NJ 08848

(631) 806-8295

 

I never really know what I am going to paint. Something strikes me…. witnessing the vulnerability in a human interaction, the magic in a landscape, a building that seems bursting with stories, an old black and white photo that can speak more than color. lt is the light, the essence that emanates from that moment in time that inspires me. A moment that could take a lifetime and many layers, to see its authenticity. My process in painting reflects that, the best ones are painted over time, an evolution of layers to unearth what really lays beneath.

Mania

Mania

Susan Mania

Susan Mania

Painting

 

Susan’s studio will be open Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

Schedule your visit via Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/323472193037

25 Strimples Mill Road, Stockton, NJ 08559

609-203-6148

In an effort to discover more of nature’s mute secrets, I open myself to the natural world in observance of organic forms, movements and color. The natural world has its changing moods that speak a language yet to be revealed. It is through listening to and conveying a story of the environment, as an intuitive exercise, that I explore through art making. In the relationships between plants, typography and weather and the impact that our human experience has on it, a dynamic story is revealed of our interconnectedness.

Harvesting plants for dyes, inks and paints, many of which are gathered from the hedgerows and fields of New Jersey is an essential way in which my work expresses a language of the landscape. By working seasonally, I can observe changes in the environment from year to year, and make a visual record of the loss of native plants, the destruction of woodland from severe weather events or the degradation of soil and changes to typography from stormwater runoff.

Conceptually organized through the use of composition and color, forms and impressions are synthesized into the idea of a new environment, beyond any specific location but bearing a sense of place. From the many natural elements that arise in my work; flora, seeds, soil patterns, fallen trees or invasive plant habitats, I pull apart individual components of line and form to re-mix and organize elements to bring a new interpretation through a layered composition and diverse color palette. Bound together all these impressions coalesce in an energetic sensation that tells a story of our connection and relationships with the land we call home.

Caldwell

Caldwell

Karen Caldwell

Karen Caldwell

Glass

 

Sunflower Glass Studio

Karen’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 10 AM to 5 PM.

877 Sergeantsville Road, Stockton, NJ 08559

(609) 397-1535

Karen Caldwell of Sunflower Glass Studio, Stockton, NJ works in botanical art using many forms of glass: glass powders that are formed into thin wafers for each plant part; transparent enamels for bird details in feathers; beveled glass for contrasting brilliant sparkle and stained glass for borders and metal joinery. All her work is Nature Inspired.

Dzhanibekova

Dzhanibekova

Inna Dzhanibekova

Inna Dzhanibekova

Mixed Media

 

Small Joys Studio

Inna’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

150 Main Street, Flemington, NJ 08822

(908) 875-6223

I am a mixed media artist with a background in biological sciences. I paint and design jewelry. My work is a joyful reflection of the forms and colors found in both natural and urban environments.

I often combine acrylics, inks, pencils, newspapers and photo transfers on canvas or board to explore interesting light and composition in all sorts of subject matter. I want to capture the fleeting exuberance of flowers, beauty of ornate textiles, decadent urban decay, and people in their environment.

My one-of-a-kind and small-edition jewelry synthesizes elements from the worlds of biology, natural and urban environments. I like using silver, gold-filled wire, enamels, gemstones, acrylics on wood, and found objects to create unconventional and original designs.

Fraser

Fraser

Terri Fraser

Terri Fraser

Painting

 

Terri Fraser Studio

Terri’s studio will be open on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM

6 Hunting Hills Road, Annandale, NJ 08801

(908) 432-5048

I have been transitioning from the way I used to approach my work.  After being in isolation from the Coronavirus, I decided it was time to jump.  I am both excited and anxious over the new works. I am an artist who paints in oil and plays with 3-dimension.  Both rely on my feelings toward reminiscences, nature and the mundane.

When I paint in oils I use grids, organic circles, and sometimes small hashes that are a translation of the work I do 3-dimensionally.   Memories of people, places, and things I have done are stories I enjoy expressing through abstraction.  With each work I always include some form of nature (landscape).

Sculpture is a little different.  They have always been about freedom of expression. The expression portion is formed in clay or encaustic, working with natural elements to allow for a sense of time.  I loved playing in the dirt and getting messy and still do. When I was young, I roamed in the woods & streams and built forts out of whatever I could find these bright memories are some of what I work at including in my 3-dimensional work.

 

Like so many artists, I work at finding the true essence.  For me to bring a memory into a physical visual story means I must use how I felt/feel about it.  This way I remain true to the myself and can share through a painting or sculpture.   Sometimes I know specifically what it is I want to say and other times it is more abstract.  Because these remembrances are not always clear for me, I work between the elusive and tangible.

Von Holtermann

Von Holtermann

Kevin Von Holtermann

Kevin Von Holtermann

Painting

 

Kev Von Holt Gallery

Kevin’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM. 


50 Stangl Road, Flemington, 08822

(908) 304-8955

I paint in a disarray of stacked paintings half done and tons of paint tubes laying around . . . it is also shared with my music room/recording studio. It is a beautiful mess, but that’s how I like it.
 
Everything I make, whether it be a painting, music or a photograph, all start with this uncontrollable urge and racing obsessive thoughts that quickly pull me toward the studio. That quickly sparks a fire inside that engulfs my entire being!

Jersey

Jersey

Bill Jersey

Bill Jersey

Painting

 

Bill Jersey Art

Bill’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

60 Canal Street, LAMBERTVILLE, NJ 08530

UPDATE: There is a glitch in GOOGLE Maps, and Bill’s address is not appearing in the correct location. Please see below for a map showing Bill’s location in LAMBERTVILLE! 

(609) 994-7412

 

Reflections on a Life in the Arts

My life has been blessed with opportunities of engagement with an array of people and places – from farmers in the Georgian Republic to the Contras of Nicaragua to youngsters on the streets of Harlem. I spent my filmmaking career documenting the stories of people in their unique settings. Through the lens of my 16mm camera, light and composition and accuracy were essential to capturing stories.

Retired from filmmaking, I picked up a paintbrush in place of the camera. In plein air or studio settings I can quietly observe and record with perspective beyond motion picture storytelling. I can imagine and paint the summer’s dance of a tree or the stately elegance of an aging barn next to a tree blooming with new life. Recording with brush and paint has become my poetry and obsession.

At 94, I can say that I’ve been truly privileged to have spent a lifetime in the arts – beginning with my first job out of USC Film School, Art Director of The Blob – to the current time of reflection and creativity.

London

London

Cara London

Cara London

Painting

 

Cara London Fine Art

Cara’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

106 Bertron Road, Flemington, NJ 08822

(908) 500-0410

Painting is a natural means of expression for me. My artwork reflects the joy and struggle of the creative process. I paint with oils and acrylics, and I often use the world around me for inspiration. Lately, I have been exploring the power of pure abstraction as a means of communication.

My approach is intuitive and evolutionary, involving a continual dialogue with the materials and the subject matter. It’s a balancing act between control and accident. Subject matter serves as a means for me to organize line, color, shape, and form. Ideally, the end result is something of a surprise that has a resonant power and speaks on its own terms.

I am in love with making art. When it coalesces, artist and viewer share a profound wordless dialogue. I know how I feel when I look at a work of art that takes my breath away. Experiencing art, as creator or viewer, reflects the best of the creative spirit pulsing in our shared humanity.

MacKinnon

MacKinnon

Christina MacKinnon

Christina MacKinnon

Painting

 

CSM Fine Art

Christina’s studio will be open on Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

91 Cherryville Stanton Road, Flemington, NJ 08822  (Note: The driveway is called Quick Lane, last house at the end.)

(908) 432-8582

My studio practice as an abstract painter explores color, pattern, and movement through repetition. I experience this exploration as navigation amid created tensions. In my personal life, I am interested in the process of restoration and the space between narratives that shaped my childhood and my mission to dismantle them. Working at a large scale invites an immersive, palpable, metaphorical experience that affords me the space to orchestrate controlled fields of dissonance and reckoning of emotion.

Modern Fossils

Modern Fossils

Judith Marchand

Judith Marchand

Mixed Media

 

Modern Fossils Environmental Art

Judith’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 10 AM to 6 PM. 

207 Milford Road, Frenchtown, NJ 08825

(908) 247-6422

Mankind’s interaction with its natural environment is the basis and subject of this work. Just as natural fossils are the imprints of prehistoric life on earth, Judith and David have created “Modern Fossils”: pieces that ponder the substances we are currently leaving behind in our environment, to be unearthed far in the future. These artists were inspired by the embellished metal manhole and storm drain covers that are found in their local river towns. With these in mind, they create original plaster artworks, which represent their community’s impact on the waterways that sustain us and give us life. During clean-ups of local waterway environments, these artists collect both natural materials and man-made detritus, which they then use to create the images in their pieces. The resulting wall-hangings embody the modern dilemma of mankind’s struggle to maintain a balanced relationship with nature. Their artworks also proclaim the vital environmental message stressing the necessity of keeping our waterways clean and healthy. Modern Fossils have their roots in Judith’s love for the environment and her local river town community, combined with David’s 20+ years of experience in creating and casting environmental sculptures in his native NYC and in cities around the world.

 

 

Mundy

Mundy

Christine Mundy

Christine Mundy

Jewelry

 

 

Frenchtown Metalworks

Christine’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

31 8th Street, Frenchtown, NJ 08825

(908) 421-5029

As a child, I was often seen walking around, with my head down. “In a fog,” as my mother put it. I was searching for things, interesting things. Much later I learned these things were called “found objects” by artists. These days I tend to search in flea markets and at rummage sales. Some of my finds have developed into collections, such as old photographs, religious souvenirs, old buttons, old bottles, seashells, interesting stones. My collections don’t tend to have any value, they might even be considered junk by some people. But, they are things that I personally find interesting.

I believe my interest in these objects have a direct correlation to my design sensibilities. I prefer things that look old and worn to the shiny and new. I delight in the bizarre and quirky. These things surround me in my studio and inspire me. I don’t really have a sketchbook for ideas. A regular part of my process is to lay out  objects and materials that I would like to include in a piece of jewelry. I meditate on these things and ideas for them spark into my head. It really does feel like a flash, and the pleasure of this idea-getting is hard to describe.

I have no interest in making the sort of jewelry you would find at a chain store in a mall. I’m inspired by both ancient jewelry and mid-century art jewelry. I enjoy making things that I, myself would love to wear. I find myself somewhat heartbroken when a piece is purchased, but I’m consoled by the idea that the person who purchased it must also love it. And, of course, I get to make more.

Moonan

Moonan

Florence Moonan

Florence Moonan

Painting

 

Florence Moonan Studio

Florence’s studio will be open on Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

1 Church Street, Stockton, NJ 08559

(609) 397-1882

I am a visual artist who lives and maintains a studio in Hunterdon County, New Jersey. I am not timid when painting intuitive abstractions. I follow my heart, listen to my instincts and let the work flow, whether I am developing an interesting texture, experimenting with a new color or taking advantage of the unexpected.

I allow the paintings to reveal themselves through my process. There are moments when I get lost in my work. That’s when the magic happens and that’s when I know I am on to something. Concerns in my artwork spring from bits and pieces of my memory, family history, travel, the natural world, and above all, music. I continue to seek inspiration from my personal history upcycling my vinyl record collection into sculptures. My current medium of choice is venetian plaster and mixed media. The unique qualities of venetian plaster help me produce layered surfaces that reveal fragmented patterns and rich textures. At times, bold marks originate from visceral reactions to music.

Trisiano

Trisiano

Laura Trisiano

Laura Trisiano

Mixed Media

 

Laura Trisiano Art

Laura’s studio will be open Sunday, May 1 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

3 Wildwood Road, Califon (Tewksbury, Township), NJ 07830  

(908) 268-5933

My art is inspired by nature, architecture, and the yogic arts. My creative process begins by collecting things that “speak to me,” whether of man-made or natural materials. I resonate with what has been around for a while and conveys the passage of time. I use old metal, wood, concrete, worn shells and rocks, silk, bamboo, and rare beads, to name a few. There’s a mystery about older places and things that tell a story that is all their own. I find things in nature, antique shops, flea markets, and while walking along the road or in the forests. Giving new life to discarded objects that I see as beautiful is fulfilling and joyful. Although there’s always challenges putting the pieces together, I like to stay out of my head and let my heart and intuition guide me. The figures in my art represent all of us journeying together, yet alone, back home.”

Suttle

Suttle

Catherine Suttle

Catherine Suttle

Painting

 

Catherine’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11AM to 5 PM.

6 Cedar Street, Frenchtown, NJ 08825

908-216-1934

My work draws from painters of the mid-20th century. Abstract Expressionism led me to a personal means of applying paint. The post-painterly abstractionists attract me because of the way they force viewers to challenge expectations. I draw upon Milton Avery’s compositions of simple shapes, awkwardness, and harmonious combinations. Avery’s quality of color is ever-present. Richard Diebenkorn’s “New Mexico” paintings influence the way my paintings are layered, revealing an underlying structure in untethered space.

The outcome of drawing upon these artists––along with something all my own––are paintings that focus on the potency of color; provide surprise in an environment of equilibrium; and engross the viewer who notices the subtle nuances that inhabit the field. Drawing on Avery, some works provide an overall sensation of awkwardness while others offer an overall sensation of composure but are built with elements that, individually, are awkward.

Reid

Reid

Robert Reid

Robert Reid

Sculpture

 

Robert Reid Studio

Robert’s studio will be open to the public on Saturday, April 30 from 11 AM to 5 PM.

65 Trenton Avenue, Frenchtown, NJ 08825

Robert’s studio will be open on Sunday, May 2 from 2:30 to 5:30 PM.

I have been building/making things as long as I can remember. At the age of five I was watching my neighbors house being constructed. This interest in wood and how pieces are shaped and put together has been a lifelong interest for me. I would describe my work as constructionist in approach. I am drawn to elemental shapes, positive and negative space, shadows, and the color and grain of wood.

Over the years I have found my language for how these pieces come together in a composition that says what I need to say.