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About my work

Feel free to contact me directly for more information

or to purchase available prints.

I did my first woodcut while attending Kendall School of Design in Grand Rapids, MI (class of 1971) and
have been practicing the art form, on and off, ever since. My work is greatly influenced by the works of
the legendary Japanese printmakers, as well as the prints of M.C. Escher, Rockwell Kent, Barry Moser,
and various wood engravers of the early 20th century. The prints in this collection primarily represent
my annual end-of-the-year visual summation of life in general. Currently my work is shown at Turtle
Gallery
in Deer Isle, Maine and The Green Lion Gallery in Bath, Maine.

 

After graduating from art school I worked as a graphic designer, then as a woodworker. I alternated between

graphic design and printing jobs and working in carpentry and cabinetmaking, living in Montreal, Michigan and Maine. Eventually I built a house and studio in Brooksville, Maine where I now live. It seems that whether it be a forest or a piece of furniture my interests gravitate toward wood. My current position as Wildlands Steward for Great Pond Mountain Conservation Trust  is balanced by the time I spend in my woodworking shop/studio where I pursue both woodworking projects and printmaking. I’ve always enjoyed working with my hands and I find many ways of doing this. My interest in woodcut printmaking led me to develop a laminated cherry wood block which I produce and sell to other printmakers through McClain’s Printmaking Supply.
 

As an artist, much of my work is a response to the natural world which has always had great allure for me. I’m most comfortable working in solitude, but I’m inspired by the work of other artists and invigorated by meeting other artists and those who love art and the natural world. It seems to me that the work of an artist is to simply observe life and respond with honesty and openness. Maybe that's really everyone's job description. Our life is our research. Though it often seems our society deems it a trivial pursuit, I feel that creating art is a meaningful and necessary response to life.
 

Splitting bowl blanks out of an ash log that has been aging in wood chips for the past year—like unwrapping a present, always surprises. That's my shop/studio in the background.

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