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  • Edie Abnet
    Edie Abnet
    Visual Artist: Mixed Media; Visual Artist: Painting
    “My painting is a joyful response to the environment around me, to the things right outside my window. The dramatic effect of my work is intentional in order to keep the eye actively involved and the vivid color and line creates drama with the subjects of my paintings. These subjects, the birds for example, are a vicarious expression of me, the artist.” Edie Abnet grew up in Minnesota and attended art classes at the University of Minnesota and later, the Philbrooke Art Center in Tulsa, OK. She started painting with translucent watercolor and found the “rules” of watercolor painting too restrictive. Largely self-taught, she developed her distinctive style after years of painting and experimenting with mixed media. Design is the foundation of Abnet’s artwork. It is the first and critical step to her creative process. The artist has a vague idea of a tableau or “story” from which to begin. This tableau is greatly influenced as she creates the design. She initially sets down the color and watches as the painting evolves through layers of wet translucent watercolor. Abnet then enhances the composition by outlining in brilliant pastel or watercolor based crayon. These dramatic effects create a tension that draws the viewer into her work. Her distinctive paintings can be found in corporate and private collections throughout the Midwest.
  • Gloria Adrian
    Gloria Adrian
    Visual Artist: Painting
    When I begin a series of paintings, I never know where the process will lead me. As a painter, my art is a synthesis of my personal feelings, the subject or colors that inspire me, and my materials and techniques. I use changing light to create a variety of moods. Typically, I start paintings with a color idea and evolve toward compositions in which color is my primary subject. The joy of painting for me is losing myself in the process and letting the paint lead the way. Serenity and simplicity are my primary goals.
  • Jeff Ambroz
    Jeff Ambroz
    Visual Artist: Painting
    My art explores the process of arranging – and rearranging – our lives. As I wrestle with this theme, I’m working to create art that reflects the lives we create, as we continually add, subtract and compose the many parts of our being.  Doing so can be slow, and even painful, as self-doubt tries to creep in and take us off track.  Ultimately, through this process we create compositions for our lives that are wondrous, beautiful and inspiring to those around us. My art incorporates elements of gestural, abstract and expressionist styles. Currently, I’m primarily working in mixed media, creating nonrepresentational compositions recognized for their visible paint strokes and fractured, multi-layered appearance.  The resulting art reflects the layers of our lived experiences; the bonds we form, break and repair; and the passage of time. I live in Cottage Grove, MN.  I studied art at Morningside College in Sioux City, IA and graduated from Metropolitan State University in Saint Paul, MN.
  • Jennifer Anderson
    Jennifer Anderson
    Visual Artist: Painting
    I grew up in a little town in Connecticut. I grew up loving the outdoors. I received a BFA at Piedmont College in Demorest, GA. Then I hiked the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine with my now husband Kyle. I have lived in Minnesota since 2009 and love the parks and people! My husband and I continue to do little hikes and adventures. Each of my works is a self portrait describing a part of me and my life. I explore and pull details from stories, people and the world around me, jotting down the different scenes and pulling on the emotions they hold. I use nature and the female figure to relay stories of human life as well as my own. I have a strong love for and connection to nature and all it has to offer. Because of this, nature appears in many of my works. Using places I visit and have lived, I draw my landscapes as an emotion and document a memory of how I felt looking at a certain mountain, lake, or scene. Life can be illustrated through the amazing earth, and the many life forms it can create and take away. Each living thing has a purpose and a place, and I draw from their life to create a connection or meaning with my own. The use of the female figure is seen throughout my work. She is a narrator telling a story and a connection between the viewer and me, the artist. She is there to take on whatever role I feel she is meant to have or needs to portray. Her clothes and possessions are very important. They are descriptors that make her into someone specific. When she lacks clothes, it is done to make her have less of an identity. I depend on the female figure because as a woman it is how I connect to my work and add a part of me to the painting.
  • Emily Anderson
    Emily Anderson
    Visual Artist: Painting
    Emily Anderson is a painter of landscapes and the owner of HWY North Gift Shop & Gallery. Emily’s love for the outdoors deeply inspires her artwork; the urge to capture the beauty of endangered areas and the decreasing sacred spaces within nature is a driving force that keeps her creating. Forests and bodies of water are ever-present companions in Emily’s life, whether during her time spent on the coastal shores of Central California, on her daily walks along the St. Croix River, or on seasonal trips to the family cabin on Lake Superior. Emily hopes to explore the oceans and forests of the world, painting their beauty, with hopes that the paintings can continue to tell a story that is bigger than us.
  • Stephani Atkins
    Stephani Atkins
    Storyteller; Teacher / Instructor
    Stephani Atkins works as the Executive Director for StoryArk. In this role, she oversees the planning and implementation of creative writing opportunities for secondary students at The Shire. In addition, Ms. Atkins leads The Shire’s Audio Drama Team as writing mentor and executive producer of the radio and podcast series HUSH. In her past positions, Ms. Atkins has headed up youth programming, developed curriculum, initiated new ministries and organized events for a number of non-profits including mega churches, public schools and advocacy groups. She just recently worked as a marketing director for Liberty Classical Academy and has been involved in public relations as a volunteer for various arts organizations. She has served on numerous boards including The Partnership Plan, Stillwater Public Library Foundation, Students Take Action Network, and Parents United for Public Schools. Ms. Atkins graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois with a liberal arts degree that focused on journalism, American culture and secondary education.
  • Holland Atkinson
    Holland Atkinson
    Visual Artist: Photography
    Holland Atkinson is a practicing artist increasing their audience to secure a second career. Holland’s work has primarily focused on graphic design, which is what they hold an Associate Degree in. They sell designs which often focus on minerals and the natural wonders of Minnesota. To date Holland has primarily used third party vendors to print and distribute the products along with social media for broad consumption. The last two years have been a period in which they have explored photography on a serious level. Their subjects normally include detailed macro photographs of minerals and wide-angle landscape shots.
  • Colleen Baldrica
    Colleen Baldrica
    Author / Writer
    Colleen Moran Baldrica is an official Chippewa (Ojibwe) Tribe member of the Pembina Band, from the White Earth Reservation in Northern Minnesota. She has worked for more than 28 years in public education, and holds advanced degrees with an emphasis in School Counseling.  She has lived her entire life in the St. Croix River Valley, and currently resides in Stillwater, Minnesota, with her husband. Colleen worked in education for over 28 years;  presently she mentors writers, leads drumming circles,  does presentations, actively volunteers. Colleen is the author of “Tree Spirited Woman.”  
  • Leslie Batt-Lutz
    Leslie Batt-Lutz
    Visual Artist: Jewelry; Visual Artist: Painting; Visual Artist: Pottery/Ceramics
    I’ve always loved natural materials and being around fire – from campfires as a kid to glassblowing in college.  While in high school at art camp one Summer at UW-Green Bay, I hung out in the painting studio, but I was fascinated by the flames and smoke of the raku firings happening on the patio outside.  I was fortunate, then, while in college at the University of Wisconsin – River Falls (getting my B.F.A. in sculpture) to learn from its stellar faculty at the time – which included Doug Johnson, Kurt Wild, and Jim Engebretson among others. Now, after years of juggling, I’ve retired from the job in corporate America, raised an awesome family, and can find a bit more time to fulfill my art-heart.  Though I love painting and mixed media sculpture still, the siren song of raku has captured me.  I embrace the unpredictability of raku in every firing.  I set up my small low-tech kiln in my backyard and in batches of four or six tiny pots, I’m mesmerized by fire and smoke, anxiously and impatiently waiting to see the gift of alchemy. My work is out of my little home studio in beautiful River Falls, Wisconsin where I’ve lived for 38 years.  I settled in River Falls to pursue a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of Wisconsin-River Falls and stayed active in community arts in the years since. I’ve been fortunate to have many opportunities, including working in potteries, selling at art fairs, painting large scale murals, illustrating children’s books, painting portrait commissions, and creating public art. My artistic endeavors have included Alley Exhibitionists (founding member), Mississippi Clayworks (co-owner), Art House Galley (not for profit/owner), Bella Luce Studio (owner), and CAB Board member.  Art venues have included the River Falls Public Library, The Mabel Tainter, Wisconsin Regional Arts Program, Hammond Arts Alliance, Art on the Kinni, Ketchikan Area Arts and Humanities Council in Ketchikan, AK, and several River Falls Utility Box Beautification projects.
  • Casey Beck
    Casey Beck
    Visual Artist: Pottery/Ceramics
    My work is based around the idea of function and utility. I have always enjoyed the pleasure of using handmade objects and strive to share this love with others around me. Initially, the majority of the work is thrown and altered while still on the wheel. After it has had time to set up, the foot is turned and clay is then subtracted to define the form and create edges and plains. The work is primarily fired in atmospheric kilns. After strategic placing in the kiln, the work is left to the kiln to decide in collaboration with myself what is painted onto the work by the fire. Depending on how the pot is placed in the kiln, sometimes it may be gently kissed by the fire and atmosphere, but on the other hand, it may be bombarded with the same atmosphere. The reason I choose this process, and let the kiln partially decide how the work will look is very spontaneous and never creates the same mark twice. This process creates a new excitement with each firing, and makes me keep coming back for more.
  • Barb Bend
    Barb Bend
    Visual Artist: Fiber Art / Fine Craft
    As a fiber artist, I am drawn to the rich heritage of cloth and the story it tells through its content, color, design and cultural history. I work with fabrics that have their own integrity and voice. In my fiber sculptures, I explore the interplay of cross cultural fabrics stitched side by side with a reconfiguration of contemporary “throw away items” that share the pattern, color or texture. I look to these contemporary items, such as snaps, perm rollers, zippers, for their design elements and ability to attach and repeat thus creating a rhythmic pattern to sew on to these fiber sculptures. The armature of my sculptural forms are welded metal, fencing or electrical wire. The shapes are built up by tightly wrapped strips of knit t-shirt fabric to create a solid form. The result is a firm, self supporting structure that can withstand the weight of the materials I choose to use. This structure also allows my forms to flare out with movement to express the spirit of life and energy of emotions.
  • Robert Boettcher
    Robert Boettcher
    Visual Artist: Woodworking
    I was born and raised in Wisconsin, and have lived in Minnesota since 1973. I have always loved working with wood, and my interests have focused on woodturning in recent times. I make a variety of items including utilitarian and gift items, as well as items more properly described as wood art. As with all things wood, each item is a unique piece, embodying the highlights and flaws of a specific piece of wood; nature’s palette. I very much enjoy utilizing wood with interesting and unusual features, such a spalting, knots, worm holes and the like. I work primarily with woods native to the upper Midwest, including maple, black walnut, black cherry, white birch, white oak, ash, buckthorn and others. I also use some tropical hardwood species, mainly for embellishment, and strive to ensure that this wood is obtained from sustainable sources. I enjoy giving demonstrations, and sharing what I have learned with others. Helping others with this craft is a major foundation of the woodturning community.
  • Tim Bruckner
    Tim Bruckner
    Visual Artist: Sculpture
    Tim Bruckner’s earliest memory of sculpting was when he was seven. He sculpted little heads of the Seven Dwarves out of wax tubes a disgustingly sweet liquid candy was packaged in. From the very beginning, he was a wax sculptor.  He uses a different kind of wax now and stays away from sweets, for the most part. He started working professionally at 18 as a jeweler’s apprentice/wax carver. He sculpted several hundred wildlife waxes that became rings, pendants, broaches and belt buckles. It was the single most valuable experience of his professional life. In those two years he learned the foundation of his art that would sustain him for over forty years. After leaving the jewelry racket, he found a very patient and sympathetic agent and started working as a freelancer. His first free lance job was for Max Factor, sculpting a menagerie of fanciful animals and decorative objects.  From there he sculpted two alligator suits for the movies Joe Panther and Alligator. He did a handful of album covers for various artists; Ray Charles, Ringo Starr, The Average White Band, George Clinton and Parliament and a dust jacket for Cat Stevens. He stepped away from sculpting for a while to pursue a music career. When common sense returned in the form, shape and substance of his amazing wife, Mary, he went back to sculpture with a vengeance. A partial client list (partial because he can’t remember all the crap he made and for whom he made it.) includes: DC Direct, Mattel, Kenner, Hasbro, Toy Biz, Bowen Designs, Sideshow, Gentle Giant, Electric Tiki, Reel Arts, Enesco, Dakin, The Hamilton Group, Hallmark, Applause, American Greetings, Department 56, Ashton Drake, Franklin Mint, Geometric, Graham Nash, Harry Nilsson and the Danbury Mint. He was under contract to DC Direct for a while and worked almost exclusively for them for almost a dozen years. One of his most gratifying professional experiences was designing and sculpting the DC Dynamics line based on the art of J. C. Leyendecker. In 2010, he co-authored Pop Sculpture, how to create collectible statues and action figures published by Watson/Guptill. His Ode to Joy, a bust of Beethoven caught mid- chuckle, is among the featured images of the great man in a book published last year by Bildersammlung Museum Beethoven-Haus, Bonn, Germany. Now retired from commercial work, he focuses on commission and personal work. Big howdy to Errol and Anne. Two of the most amazing people he’s ever met.
  • Gayle Brunner Frandrup
    Gayle Brunner Frandrup
    Visual Artist: Painting
    My love of fine art stemmed from my early years of education. At age 12 I was awarded first place in the state of Wisconsin safety poster contest. From that point I went on to enjoy art classes in high school and college, obtaining my Bachelor’s of Fine Arts degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. I enjoy many fine art media but my emphasis is on the art of watercolor painting. Growing up in Western Wisconsin surrounded by the beauty of this area has greatly inspired me in my paintings. The watercolor medium has been a challenge and a fascination because of  the transparent quality of it and it gives me the opportunity to create something amazing and sometimes unexpected from what my original intent was for my painting. I enjoy the endless creative possibilities in this watercolor medium and I’m always excited to learn new ways of painting and connecting with other artists. We all learn from each other! Gayle’s work can be found at the Orange Dragon Gallery in Prescott, WI.
  • Leslie Carpenter-Holt
    Leslie Carpenter-Holt
    Visual Artist: Photography
    Leslie is a fine art photographer working primarily in black and white and occasionally color to create digital images of the world around me. Her focus is primarily nature, but she also gravitates toward architectural and landscape subjects. By accentuating form, line and texture her aim is to give life to the seemingly mundane. Sometimes this means using photo editing software to make adjustments to exposure, contrast and color. She rarely finds a need to use complex editing to convey my messages. She seeks to challenge the view of the everyday environment in order to make the artistic aesthetic accessible to all and promote a sense of well-being. Her creative motivation is driven by a need to demonstrate to herself and others a certain order or pattern inherent in nature as well as the built environment that, hopefully, helps us understand our place in it.
  • Morgan Clifford
    Morgan Clifford
    Visual Artist: Fiber Art / Fine Craft
    Morgan works with textiles because first and foremost she loves to handle them. If someone asks her “why weaving?” She feels the answer in her fingertips. The tactile quality of beautiful linens, silks and bristly, hand-spun hemp combined with her own dyeing processes fills her with enormous pleasure. Morgan is happiest in her studio handling fibers, sorting them, dyeing them, untangling them, testing ideas, planning new pieces and finalizing them. If you wanted to really punish her you would make her go outside and play.
  • Elissa Cottle
    Elissa Cottle
    Author / Writer; Poet; Teacher / Instructor
    Elissa loved to promote achievements & stories of conscientious businesses, organizations and professionals. She provided writing expertise for entrepreneurs, builders, artists, planners, designers, health care providers, government, nonprofits and more. Her talent for putting art in business and organization writing came from a lifelong pursuit of creative writing. She was a published poet and taught creative writing classes for adults. Shortly before her death in 2021, Elissa published a book of poetry, The Receiving Quilt: Poems.
  • Sue Cranston
    Sue Cranston
    Teacher / Instructor; Visual Artist: Mixed Media; Visual Artist: Painting
    I live on the Kinnickinnic river with my family in Wisconsin. I graduated with a teaching degree in 1992 from The University of Wisconsin-River Falls and teach drawing and painting classes at Cretin-Derham Hall High School in St. Paul, Minnesota. I’m nostalgic and fond of combining vivid memorable images from my childhood with my experiences with Motherhood. Often my art work pays close attention to documenting details that reflect my love of uniforms and textiles. Other times, my work reflects experiments with color while documenting everyday objects or subjects that I find particularly striking.
  • Dorie Cronin
    Dorie Cronin
    Visual Artist: Pottery/Ceramics
    Dorie is a studio potter who lives outside Minneapolis on her 13 acre farm. Her medium is high fire porcelain and she makes all her own crystalline glazes. Dorie also creates sculptural pieces many of which focus on women and their story.
  • Pauly Cudd
    Pauly Cudd
    Visual Artist: Glass
    Glassblowing is my life’s passion.  I am attracted to the mystical qualities of fluid glass.  It is truly challenging to manipulate and persuade a media that you can’t touch with your hands.  Instead I have to rely on different methods of shaping and forming the glass, such as wood blocks, wet newspaper, and gravity. I’m best known for my love experimenting with a variety of colors and glassblowing techniques. Some of my favorite work has copper foil embedded into the glass. The chemical reaction between the heat of the glass and the foil creates an amazing color palate. Another technique I love is adding baking soda to the glass, which makes for a “Bubblicious” creation.  Other new work includes hanging pendant lights and “Memories” paperweights, ornaments and other glass pieces into which the cremains of a loved one, human or pet, are enclosed into what becomes an everlasting memorial. I love the emotions that come over me while coaxing the hot glass and its color possibilities into a unique, beautiful piece of art.  With each piece I make, I try to pass on my passion for glass to the new owner.
  • Guillermo Cuellar
    Guillermo Cuellar
    Visual Artist: Sculpture
    I was born in Maracaibo, Venezuela in 1951 and studied ceramics at Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa, where I fell in love with the potter’s wheel and the unpretentious beauty of old pots. After working as an environmentalist I returned to pottery in 1980. With the certainty of youth I embraced the notion that pursuing the life of an artist potter was possible and would lead to a better society. In 1986 I set up a studio in the village of Turgua, an hour southeast of the capital city, Caracas, where I made pots for the following 18 years. Traveling in Venezuela, I came across the baskets, pots, weaving, and woodwork of native Indian people. Seeing their beautiful folk art in its context in daily use was an epiphany. It was not only the handwork I loved but the capacity of these pieces to transcend their function and bring people together; to be vessels of the group’s identity. The way the Indians relate to their art, not at a distance but keeping it close at hand, remains an ideal to me. In that spirit, my pots are made for use, for preparing and sharing food. I want them to be accessible, not confined to a formal setting or behind glass. Beautiful handmade objects should be a part of our daily lives, often in use in our hands. In 1992 a group of my Venezuelan potter friends came together to found Grupo Turgua, a non-profit association of artisans dedicated to the support of good craft in Venezuela. From 1992 to 2005 Grupo Turgua hosted twenty-eight group sales at the Turgua studio, offering pottery, jewelry, photography, woodwork, drawing, weavings, Venezuelan native crafts and other creative work. In 2005 my wife, Laurie, our children and I moved back to the USA and established a home, studio and showroom in the upper St. Croix River valley near Shafer, Minnesota, where I am currently making pots. In 2008 I was invited to participate as one of seven host studios on the Minnesota Potters of the Upper St. Croix Valley Annual Pottery Tour.
  • Amy Danielson
    Amy Danielson
    Dancer; Visual Artist: Jewelry
  • Catherine Dauphinais-Oba
    Catherine Dauphinais-Oba
    Visual Artist: Glass; Visual Artist: Glass
    Catherine Dauphinais-Oba designs and creates unique, decorative and functional fused glass art.  Using the finest materials, she cuts the glass into a design which is assembled and fired twice in a kiln.  The first firing fuses the design into one piece of glass.  The second firing bends the glass into a shape.  The end result? a beautiful piece of fused glass art.  Given the nature of this hand-crafted art, no two pieces are ever the same, each piece having it’s own variations. Many designs are inspired by the natural beauty of Minnesota, but there are also several contemporary designs.  
  • Jennifer Davenport
    Jennifer Davenport
    Visual Artist: Drawing Illustration
    One of my favorite things about making art is immersing myself in a subject that I’m fascinated with or curious about, and then presenting it in a way that highlights the qualities I find beautiful. My latest body of work is a series of charcoal drawings depicting young girls in moments of concentration, exploration, and discovery. They were inspired by my daughter and other girls that I had met while assistant teaching for a year. As they played, I could see them using their imagination, trying things out, making connections. They hadn’t yet absorbed the expectations our society puts on girls in relation to gender and power, and hadn’t yet learned to doubt themselves. They knew their own voices and were truly themselves in these moments. To me, this is beautiful. These girls represent my own lifelong journey towards a kinder self-understanding and broader perception of the world we live in.
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