Come to see the art,
stay to feed the horses.
Toy Monkey, by Carol L. Douglas |
The Kelpie Gallery
is located in front of Pepper Hill Farm
in South Thomaston. I’ve never walked back to the barns, because I’m always too
busy looking at the paintings. However, gallery owner Susan Lewis
Baines promises that if I visit next Saturday, November 18, she’ll give me
(and you) carrots to treat the beasties with.
That’s an irresistible deal. Sue is sometimes seen with a furry
fellow who might be a Haflinger—I don’t know, because we’ve never been properly
introduced—and perhaps I’ll get to meet him. We kept horses in my misspent
youth, and I know them pretty well. I doubt I could swing into a saddle now,
but I can still whisper sweet nothings in their ears.
I’ll be there because the Kelpie Gallery will be presenting
its Holiday Season show, Provenance,
with an opening reception on Friday, November 17, from 5 to 8 PM. The party
continues all day Saturday. Sue’s offering hot coffee or mulled cider and
homemade biscotti, including a gluten-free option. If you’ve never attended an
opening at the Kelpie, you don’t yet know that Sue’s a first-rank foodie. The
nibbles at her events are always fantastic.
Little White Pumpkin, by Nancy Lee Lovley |
I dropped off two pieces for the show yesterday. I never
meant to go past the doorway, but was drawn in to look at a small, detailed painting
by Jerry Cable that called
to me from the farthest room. It was of the white walls and red roof of Monhegan Island Light.
It was iconic while still avoiding any hint of cliché. This is a hard trick to
pull off, and it’s the best in Maine regional painting. It’s why people come
here to look at art.
I’m often compelled to look farther than I intended when I
stop at the Kelpie Gallery. Sue’s a painter herself, and I think her
arrangement of paintings is a continuation of her own color sense. She treats
it fluidly, making it flow from room to room. She can hang disparate works together
in a way that flatters them all.
Father Christmas, by Carol L. Douglas |
The two paintings I dropped off are silly and sweet—a Father
Christmas figurine and a toy monkey. Both remind me of younger days and a house
full of noisy kids on Christmas morning.
Represented artists are Tania Amazeen-Jones, Susan Lewis
Baines, Holly Berry, John Bowdren, Jerry Cable, Sandra Leinonen Dunn, Maggie
Galen, Julie Haskell, Pamela Hetherly, Beth London, Nancy Lee Lovley, the late Erik
Lundin, Angela Anderson Pomerleau, Wayne Robbins, Ann Sklar, Kay Sullivan,
Gwen Sylvester, and Lucas Sylvester. Oh, and yours truly.
To get to the Kelpie Gallery, just head south on Maine Rt.
73 from Rockland. The gallery is about a mile south of the Owls Head
Transportation Museum and on the same side of the road. (That’s 81 Elm Street,
S. Thomaston, if you’re using your GPS.)
And, yes, the bridge over the Weskeag is now open.
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