Featured Artist for Sunday, February 7:
Rebecca Daugherty
Rebecca Daugherty:
Windmills, Second Island with Dark Clouds
Windmills, Second Island with Dark Clouds
Rebecca Daugherty, from her studio overlooking Stonington Harbor, has a broad range of subjects competing for her attention. She moved to Stonington in 2003, however, to paint from the fleet of fishing boats. Daugherty is drawn to tightly-composed details that, along with the quality of light or the state of the water surface, form vignettes suggesting mood and perhaps a story that the viewer can only imagine.
Rebecca Daugherty:
Winter Roadwork, Blue Hill
Winter Roadwork, Blue Hill
Drawing from often-overlooked details from everyday life, Daugherty develops her ideas through an ongoing series of painting. Her landscapes might include an arrangement of road-
workers and orange cones, or the windmills on Vinalhaven. Her interiors might focus on a plate of donuts or a steaming cup of coffee.
workers and orange cones, or the windmills on Vinalhaven. Her interiors might focus on a plate of donuts or a steaming cup of coffee.
Rebecca Daugherty:
Yellow Float
Yellow Float
Rebecca Daugherty studied painting at Goddard College and printmaking at the University of Iowa. Her work has been exhibited and sold since 1988, currently through Isalos Fine Art in Stonington, Maine, and the Camden Falls Gallery in Camden, Maine. In 2009, she was included in Carl Little's article "Artists of the Working Waterfront" in Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors Magazine.