Body of Work Exhibits in September

 Marlene Zychowski

The Joy of Still Life 

My painting style is ever evolving, leaning from realism to impressionism. I work in oils and pastels, painting subjects that make me happy in hopes they will please others as well. My work tends to be “tight” and I am trying to loosen up my approach. Still life (food, florals, found objects) and landscapes are the subjects that interest me, especially the variety of flowers and peonies I grow from my gardens. I enjoy color and use it freely.

I work from life using my own setups and from photos I have taken. I also paint in plein air with local groups and in competitions but prefer the solace and comfort that my well-lit home studio provides. I utilize warm and cool lighting with which I am still experimenting.

As I learn and grow, my still life paintings will become more complex. I have 5 shelves in my studio with interesting objects I’ve collected including colorful glass, pitchers, plates and mugs. I strive for the greatness of Sargent and Hopper and am influenced by contemporaries such as Daniel Keys, Kathleen Dunphy, Alex Kelly and Kathy Anderson.

Carol Powley                                 

Trees, A Sense of Wonder

I am thrilled that the Seacoast Artist Association Gallery, in Exeter, N.H., has presented me with the opportunity to show my 2023 Body of Work: Trees, A Sense of Wonder.

Trees are unique drawings of nature. Each individual branch maintains its own shape, color and design. By machine drawing with silk thread on my painted cotton fabric I am able to express that trees are a harbinger of spring, their buds bursting open with lovely greens and glorious pastels. During the summer you can hear the sound of leaves rustling in the breeze. You are rewarded with blazing color in autumn. In winter the trees lift their limbs up to God to pray. “Trees are poems that the earth writes upon the sky.” Kahil Gibran

My free motion machine embroidery on cotton is a spontaneous response to the color, texture, and design of the trees that thrive in our natural environment here in New Hampshire and Maine. I hand paint the surface of white cotton panels with transparent water color paint made specifically to be used on cotton and silk fabrics. My sewing machine is placed in front of my second floor studio window which overlooks a forest of Pine, Oak and Birch trees. The seacoast shore and Great Bay area serve as a background for my tree drawings. I have discovered an art form that I love and am able to apply my education as an artist in order to create beautiful landscapes.

Carol Powley has a degree in Fine Art from Rowan University SuMa Cum Laude, 1977. The artist learned to quilt during the 90’s and found that her knowledge of color, design and painting could be adapted to the fiber medium. Carol relocated to Kittery, Maine, in 2007, from New Jersey, where she had exhibited her paintings and Fiber Art throughout New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania. She maintains a studio in her home in Kittery, Maine.

A listing of Carol Powley’s recent local shows include: Ayers Loft Gallery, Lowell, Ma. August 2022; Connecting Threads Invitational, Levy Gallery, Portsmouth, N.H. Spring 2022; Project Stitch: BJ Glanville & Carol Powley, Morgan Gallery, Kittery, Me. 2018; Wonderful Women Painters: Kittery Art Association Gallery, Kittery, Me. 2016.

Carol Powley is a juried member of the New Hampshire Art Association. Also Kittery Art Association Seacoast Art Association, SAFA Seacoast Area Fine Artists.