Gallery Hours: Thursday-Saturday, 1-5 pm
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 26, 5-7 pm
For over 25 years, the LPCA has presented a fall juried art exhibition to celebrate the extraordinary talent of artists in our region and beyond.
This longstanding tradition brings to life not only the astounding beauty of the Adirondack landscape, but also a broad range of viewpoints in all mediums that explore subjects beyond the familiar wildlife, mountains and lakes. Always free to the public, this annual exhibit features work from 50-100 artists and distributes $5,000 in cash prizes to the creators of the top three works, as selected by each year’s jurors. From paintings and pottery to photography and fiber arts, we are proud to highlight and support local art.
ACCEPTED WORKS
Listed alphabetically by title
A new blank tablet: January 20, 2021 12:00 PM EST Susan Hoffer FIRST PLACE
Algorithmic Christopher Fields
Along My Walk Mary Woodcock Johnson
Arizona Azurite with Geometric Shapes Karen Parker
Bee The Queen Karen Parker HONORABLE MENTION
Bikini Body Mollie Ward
Blue Fall Larry Malone
Blue Plate Special Kathy “Kass” Ford
Bouffantdolf Bosco McKinney
Breeze On The Pond Anne Heinz
Butterfly Tears Mollie Ward HONORABLE MENTION
Climate Choice Barry Lobdell
Corn Eleanor Sweeney
Crystal Carin Erik Wilson
Curiosity Travis Jeffrey
Daily Choices Judson Brown
Defying Gravity Judson Brown HONORABLE MENTION
Dockside Nip Rogers
Drops Joyce Hanson
Durant Lake – Blue Mountain Judson Brown
Evening Light Susan Whiteman
Everywhere Noah Bonesteel
Evolving – Loss Suzanne Lebeda
Fern Dreaming Phil Gallos
Fifteen Volumes Travis Jeffrey
Fireflies Becky Johnson
Forager Bunny Emily Tyman
Four Eggs In A Row David Gualtieri
Gingkos Angela Nephew HONORABLE MENTION
Glowing Barry Lobdell
Granite Dells VII Gary Larsen
Great Plains Rest Stop Barry Lobdell
Greening Up, View From Whiteface Sandra Hildreth
Hockey On Snow John Eldridge
Hot Pink Mollie Ward
I Can Hear You Sarah E. Brown
Ignota Return Kailey Maher
In Winter Joy Muller-McCoola SECOND PLACE
Inheritance Sophia Brandt
Jehovah Ezrah Brianna Guerra
Lake Placid- Adirondack Mountains Aram Ghahramanyan
Lofts Richard Fisher
Low Tide III Gary Larsen
Lower Ausable Lake Harriet D. Kline
Nature’s Path Tom Fox
Ocean Twisted Sari Mallow
Ommatidia Russ Hartung
Owl Sophia Brandt
Palm Frond Larry Poole
Pleasing Fungus Beetle Norman Taber
Range Jeff Wiegand
Reflections Mary Woodcock Johnson
Remembrance Amy Webb
Reproductive Decisions Are Complicated Susan Hoffer
River Talk Tracy Finn
Room To Grow Catherine LaPointe-Vollmer HONORABLE MENTION
Salt River Sky Gary Larsen
Scorched Grasslands Joy Muler-McCoola
Seed Bank Diane Fine and Mario LaPlante THIRD PLACE
Self, Reflection Jim McNaughton
Summer Sky Mary Woodcock Johnson
The Blue Line Greg Badger
The Flow Of Things Jeff Berry
The Gray Day Mary Woodcock Johnson
The Guide Judson Brown
The Journey Begins Jeff Berry
The Journey’s Reward Julia Chambers
The Refiner Brianna Guerra HONORABLE MENTION
The Shadows and the Dreaming Steven Cobb
This Land Is Your Land Elena Kuki
Through The Trees Joyce Hanson
Towering Abstraction Nancy Thun
Traces of Woodpeckers Lynn Manning
Travelers Rest Catherine LaPointe-Vollmer
Turkey Tail Lynn Manning
Wabi Sabi Orb Vase #8 Peter Shrope
Wabi Sabi Orb Vase #9 Peter Shrope
Wanika Falls – Celebrating 100 Years of the N-P Trail Sandra Hildreth
Watch The World Burn Elsa Koop-Angelicola
We Are But A Speck Michelle Spiziri
Whiteface William Crosby
Wild Geese Becky Johnson
Wind at Heaven Hill Farm Leigh Ann Smith
Wind Catcher Larry Poole
Meet the Jurors
Daniel A. Bruce was born in Altona, New York, in 1978, and works predominately in the medium of sculpture. His education began at Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute and later at Rhode Island School of Design, where he completed his BFA. He then earned his MFA from Tyler School of Art in 2008. Bruce has exhibited work at various galleries, museums, art fairs, and cultural centers in the United States. He was an artist in residence at Sculpture Space Inc. in Utica, New York, and also spent two summer seasons living and working with Bread and Puppet Theater in Glover, Vermont. In 2014, he mounted a solo exhibition, in a landmarked eighteenth-century wharf at the South Street Seaport in Manhattan, where he explored the idiosyncrasies of folk beliefs and superstitions. Most recently, he exhibited in Homemade at the Leslie-Lohman Museum Project Space where he explored commonalities between the typically marginalized spheres of folk art and gay culture.
Greg Klein has spent most of his life out West chasing beautiful scenes and tinkering with beakers full of dangerous potions. He is now located in the Adirondack Mountains, a land rich with mysterious landscapes and teaming with wildlife. By exploring the boundaries between abstraction and the natural world, Greg strives to provoke a deep emotion to draw the viewer in.