{ Featured Artists }
Dana Lee

Dana Lee

Dana Rose Lee is a portrait photographer specializing in children and pets. She also photographs Universal Studio’s outdoor movie campaigns and is a contributing photographer with Glasshouse Images, a small boutique stock photography agency.
Carol Heft

Carol Heft

Gallery on the Green today introduces its July exhibition of drawings by Carol Heft. The exhibit opens with a reception 5-7 pm on July 23 and will run through August 20th. This collection of drawings takes you into the artist’s mind by showing all the attempts, adjustments, and marks of exploration—along with the final elegant resolution. The...
Jill Reynolds

Jill Reynolds

While some people think that art and science are mutually exclusive methods of exploring the natural world, Reynolds sees art as a complimentary force to science. “Unlike Scientific discourse which is restricted to the generation of propositions that strive to accurately record the operations of natural phenomena,” says Reynolds, “Art is more concerned with aesthetic appreciation as...
Bill Bonecutter

Bill Bonecutter

Inspired by relationships, family members, celebrations, photographs or nature, Bill Bonecutter’s rugs encapsulate stories, folk lore or a moment in time. Meaningful to its recipient, yet enjoyed by the beholder, his personally designed rugs interpreted as American Folk Art styled Hooked Rugs continue a practice rarely seen today. Using an old hook, a hooped stretcher and burlap,...
Henry Baker

Henry Baker

Henry Baker has been building structures for over 10 years. Originally inspired by follies of English gardens, he has turned his attention to interpreting idiosyncratic buildings here and in other countries.
Charles Griffith

Charles Griffith

Charles Griffith has been building furniture for 40 years, Shaker furniture for the last 25. “In 1986, on a lunch break from an ad agency job in New York, I went to the legendary Shaker show at the Whitney Museum. I was stunned and changed forever. To me, Shaker design isn’t just simple, it’s direct and pure—proof...
China Jorrin

China Jorrin

I became intrigued by the Hudson River Psychiatric Center in the mid-1980s, when I was a student at Bard College. (The hospital was opened in 1868, just outside Poughkeepsie, New York; its grand buildings were designed by Messers, Vaux, Withers and Co., and the grounds by Frederick Law Olmstead.) When I first saw the hospital, all the...
Bob Demchuk

Bob Demchuk

“I am drawn to the beauty and spirit of endangered wild animals in Africa and I strive to capture each creature’s individuality,” says Demchuk. “My subjects are so aristocratic that their tones and colors in Through A Photographer’s Eye are never added, merely enhanced. My work is a mixture of wildlife, lyricism and portraiture. I paint with light and...
Brine Gardens

Brine Gardens

Last August the Gallery on the Green exhibited of images from Duncan and Julia Brine, renowned landscape designers. The Brine Garden was celebrating its 20th anniversary with an exhibit of photographs and watercolors honoring Doug Tallamy’s groundbreaking book, Bringing Nature Home: How You Can Sustain Wildlife with Native Plants (2009 Timber Press.)
Stephanie Anderson

Stephanie Anderson

Stephanie Anderson graduated in 1999 with a BFA in Illustration from The Rhode Island School of Design. Her work has been seen on exhibit at the Attleboro Museum (Attleboro, MA) and the Academy of Art in San Francisco.
Bradford Blakely

Bradford Blakely

Brad Blakely is one of the leading contemporary Netsuke and Ojime carvers whose art is collected worldwide. In November 1997 Blakely and ten other western carvers were invited to meet with Robert 0. Kinsey and TIH Prince Takamado and Princess Hisako of Japan to the opening ceremonial of the Bowers Museum Joint Exhibition of the Kinsey and...
Karen Roff

Karen Roff

Karen Roff is a mixed media artist who is actively exhibiting New York City and internationally. Her sculptures are forms that approximate life, and her work addresses the idea of rupture; the point of discontinuity when familiarity ends and the thing begins to deviate into something else. The forms start as additive reconstructions from fragmented trees, bushes,...