The Bainbridge Island Historical Museum collaborated with local photographer, Joel Sackett, to produce the exhibit, “Vanishing Bainbridge.” The exhibit serves as a photographic and textual history of our built environment – before it’s too late – that will eventually become part of the museum’s permanent collection.
Read MoreWendy Brown’s collages reflect an array of elements ranging from photos, to mementos, a cherished piece of ribbon, an old postcard, and buttons or beads. Drawing from items close to the heart, she hopes viewers will resonate with significant events in their lives.
Read MoreJoin us in the BPA Gallery March 6 for the First Friday Art Walk and an enjoyable evening of art and friends. The works in this exhibit are mixed media, but the majority of them are what Thendara calls her recycled landscapes – abstract images cut “meditation-ally” and methodically by transforming something old or discarded, and hand-creating something new.
Read MoreJoin us in the BPA Gallery January 3 for the First Friday Art Walk and an enjoyable evening of art and friends. In this body of work Mary McCann explores outcomes of events in the geologic story of our planet Earth.
Read MoreJoin us in the BPA Gallery December 6 for the First Friday Art Walk and an enjoyable evening of art and friends. In this exhibit, Architect Christopher Gutsche’s personal retrospective of the unfolding story of a lifetime is told in prints.
Read MoreNatural Bainbridge, a new book published by the Bainbridge Island Land Trust, features photographs by Paul Brians, a retired WSU English professor who has done extensive photography for the Bainbridge Island Land Trust and other environmentally oriented organizations.
Read MoreMichael Nalley will share photography from a couple of portfolios, but the lead will be The Pangea Series, which imagines a long-forgotten land bridge existing between Africa and Bainbridge Island.
Read MorePatricia’s current exhibit in the BPA Gallery – “Earth, Sea & Sky” – explores emotion through the lens of nature. Nature can be a window to our moods: joy, anger, love, and exuberance.
Read MoreMandi May’s photography is inspired by her natural surroundings. Through her lens she approaches her environment and subjects with curiosity and unique angles.
Read MoreRob Wagoner seeks to stretch the viewer’s sense of the world using light, texture, contrast, scale, cropping and point of view. The images in this show are a compilation of his work following this personal vein of a creative pursuit.
Read MoreSuzanne Cheryl Gardner uses acrylics, recycled vintage jewelry, beach glass, and natural materials to create images that represent The Divine Feminine.
Read MoreNaomi Spinak’s “Everyone Has a Name” features primarily quilts, with some works on paper. The central piece of the show is an American flag piece entitled “Sweet Land of Liberty” that has guns instead of stars and is a memorial to the many people killed by guns in mass shootings since Columbine.
Read MoreMarti Tumicki Gwaltney has always had a passion for landscape paintings and drawings – beginning with the 17th Century Dutch.
Read MoreSandy Haight’s paintings will immerse you in the luminous and sensual up-close magnificence of nature’s bloom.
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