Category Archives: Body of Work

Body of Work Exhibits in March

RSBense
Isolation and Inspiration

These hauntingly familiar, otherworldly pieces were born out of the isolation experienced from the recent pandemic. The stay-at-home guidelines gave me lots of time to create. While I was cleaning and organizing my studio, I stumbled across some strangely sized ultra-high quality watercolor paper. In keeping with my New England roots, I just had to find a way to use it. Thus, this series of long and skinny landscapes was born. 

As usual, I am engaged in the process and not really doing any deep thinking. I am just playing around. I taped off a section of the paper for the “real” art and used the sides to test my colors. I was being particular about the testing, making deliberate areas of color. I was taking a class with Doris Rice, and she saw it and said, “Those look like remarques.” I quipped “What is a remarque?” It turns out that artists will sometimes paint in the margins of the print, thereby creating a remarque. “Cool,” I thought, and I kept doing my color studies on the sides of the pieces.  I then took the body of work to the framer, and I have to thank Rob at The Gilded Edge Frame Shop for telling me to keep these remarques in the framed piece. I am sure I would have covered them up! 

Judy Arnold
For Granted

You don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone. So Joni Mitchell told us, and as I age, those words ring even truer. Change is constant and inevitable. But what once progressed at a sluggish creep, now assaults us at an epic pace. The cost and availability of goods. The state of our union. Restaurant survival. Ease of travel. Sustainability of our planet. Shifting politics. The past few years have raised the curtain on so much that I once took for granted. It makes my head spin.

When a building and business that I loved and depended on was suddenly lost to fire, personal change was thrust upon me, leading to a new appreciation of the every day places in my world. I began to look at everything around me with fresh eyes, and questioned my assumptions that familiar sights would be everlasting. They won’t.

Basements of some Strawbery Banke Museum buildings are sustaining water damage from the rising sea and crumbling. Almost thirty 80-year old trees in a Portsmouth neighborhood are being removed to install new sidewalks. Large residential developments are rising like mushrooms all over Southern New Hampshire.

Each day I pass by pastoral scenes, antique barns, quirky shops and centuries old homes. I practice appreciation of those sights which bring me joy — and I take nothing for granted.

Judy Arnold is a proud lifelong NH resident and UNH graduate. Retired from an engineering career, she now pursues buying and selling antiques. Her photography journey began with some blurry B&W Instamatic snapshots in the 1960s.

During the 2020 Lockdown, Judy found the time and inspiration to begin more serious study and practice of photography. She enjoys capturing New England scenes, details of the nautical lifestyle and new takes on the mundane.

Combining her passions for antiques and photography has led to a growing collection of vintage camera lenses. Her favorite is a 1930s Russian collapsible Fed 50mm lens with a red star on the lens cap. The timeless images from Polaroid-style film are a growing area of interest.  One of Judy’s images can be found in the Portsmouth 400th Anniversary 2023 calendar.

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Body of Work Exhibits in February

Skip Berrien
Mainely Maine

My approach to painting continually evolves and is often experimental. Here I present essentially two bodies of work…one largely blue and crisp while the other is dominated by the red underpainting using a softer brush. Each evokes a different atmosphere…at least for me and maybe for you as well.

About 20 years ago while out on Monhegan, I contemplated painting as I approached retirement from medicine. I have never regretted that inspiration which has permitted me to experiment with color, composition, texture and modes of expression.

These particular paintings reflect our summers in Downeast Maine where my wife and I enjoy the vigor and solitude of the coast as well as the character of the region. The adventure with paint continues as I explore the “still lives” of nature and find expression for the spaces we pass through and inhabit.

Kathy Statires
Fresh of the Boat: Painting Along the New England Coast

After retiring from teaching art for many years, I had the desire to focus on my own artwork. Since I enjoy the outdoors, painting as a plein air artist made sense. I’ve been painting outdoors for the past six years.

My husband always had a boat at the ocean, so I’ve been in love with painting from his boat. Then, of course, looking at other subjects close to the ocean. Most of my paintings have water in some part of my works of art.

I paint with oils but also enjoy working with pastels and watercolors. When I’m outside, planning my composition, I usually start with some thumbnail sketches before drawing on my canvas. Then I visualize and paint an underpainting showing the different values. Adding color is my last step, and if I don’t have time to finish it, I’ll take notes on mixing my colors for completion. Most often I finish my paintings in my home studio.

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Body of Work Exhibits in January

CHERYL SAGER – JAN: “WINTER WHIMSY”

Winter Birch V by Cheryl Sager


I have always loved watercolor painting and added learning how to my “bucket list.” In 2014-15 I began taking watercolor painting classes with Doris Rice, a well-known watercolorist and teacher who provides many painting opportunities, as well as critique, suggestions and encouragement. Taking all of this to heart, I began entering SAA Theme Shows, and signed up for a couple of Body of Work shows. Additionally, I show and sell artwork at various art shows in the Seacoast and have even taken on a few commissions. All of my pieces are original works as I makes no prints, thus making each painting “one of a kind.” This includes the images on my cards, which can be removed, matted and framed. Each painting is signed and dated on the front and back. When you look for my signature on the front you will have to be a bit of detective because my signature is hidden within the painting. I hope you enjoy the search!

Winter River 1 by Cheryl Sager


In this Body of Work Show I wanted to share the beauty and fun of Winter. Several of the paintings take you to special places in New Hampshire, while others share various activities that make Winter special. So whether whimsical, majestic, fun or serious, the beauty of Winter is here.

SARAH OPPENHEIMER – JAN: “INSIDE, OUTSIDE, UPSIDE DOWN”

Dreaming Garden by Sarah Oppenheimer


I am a Modern Romantic artist from Kingston, NH. By profession, I have been a teacher of young children, but making things and painting has always been a part of my life. Favorite mediums include, but are not limited to, watercolor, oil, glitter and paper. As a gardener, walker, traveler and lover of animals, I find inspiration in nature. When stuck inside, I paint what is available. Currently I am an art student at the University of New Hampshire and take classes at the Currier Museum. I find inspiration in color, line shape, art history and architectural corners. As a reader I find inspiration in literature.

Wallis Sands by Sarah Oppenheimer


My mini show at Seacoast Artist Association is titled – “Inside, Outside, Upside Down.” The title is respectfully borrowed from Stan and Jan Berenstain. In it you will find works painted inside, some outside and yes, one that works upside down. My work has been exhibited in my mother’s pantry, and now in my children’s homes, local libraries and coffee houses and a few small galleries. I am happily finding a home here at Seacoast Artist Association.

Body of Work Exhibits in December

DANNIELLE GENOVESE – OH, LOOK! SOMETHING SHINY!

Sugar Shack by Dannielle
Genovese

Hampstead artist, Dannielle Genovese enjoys exploring all forms of artistic expression and has studied with many nationally known artists from Maine to Florida. Her work has been published in Paranassus, the Inter-Arts magazine of Northern Essex Community College and on the cover of the of NH Living magazine. She has been awarded prizes from the New Hampshire Art Association, the Newburyport Art Association and the Seacoast Artist Association, where she currently holds membership. Since retiring from teaching, she has traveled extensively, become an EMT, and served in many civic and church groups

Gentle Night by Dannielle
Genovese

“This show is an eclectic combination of images that represent the beauty of our New England Environment.,” she tells us. “There are many scenes and subjects that excite me. If it speaks to me, I’ll paint it. If I really listen and study it, it will inform me and maybe even share some deeply spiritual teaching previously hidden. I’ve been painting pretty steadily since 2001 and I’ve dabbled in many media. I’ve created monoprints, watercolors, acrylics and even a few oils but I mostly create watercolors or mix media pieces. You see, I like all of them. The endless variety of scenes to paint gives me joy. Looking for new subject matter and even noticing a small part of the most ordinary and turning that little part into a statement and maybe a little surprise no one else noticed before is fun.”

BARBARA LONDON – WATER and WINTER

Water in Winter by Barbara London

“Art in any form for me is self-expression. I like the process of rendering what I imagine,” Barbara London tells us about her Body of Work show “Water and Winter.” “As with a jazz solo, I take an improvisatory approach. I like to see where a particular motif will take me. After a preliminary sketch, a painting begins to lead me as it evolves.

“Water, both liquid and crystalline, has been a recurring theme in my work. I have lived near a lake or the Atlantic most of my life. Having grown up in northern Maine, my childhood memories are filled with swimming underwater in summer and being enveloped in swirling white in winter. My exploration of lakes, ponds, oceans, aquatic fauna and flora, horizon lines, and snow has ranged from representational to increasing abstraction. In a recent series, ‘Power of Water’, I reflect on the reality that along with its beauty and awe-inspiring essence, water can also harm in an instant.”

Power of Water 2 by Barbara London

Barbara is a musician, composer, artist, writer, and educator. Her long career in the arts has involved composing for and leading her own jazz groups, exhibiting her watercolor paintings, producing recordings for her wild aster label, and becoming the first female Chair at Berklee College of Music. She left the College in 2005 to focus on her painting and composing.