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Retired Mass Art teacher s protest sculpture fills his Marshfield yard

MARSHFIELD  When Rockland artist Kata Stack tells friends she works at the house on Route 139 with all those steel sculptures in the yard, they say, Oh that house? Wait a second, what s going on in there? You re welcome to stop and see for yourself. George Greenamyer, the 81-year-old sculptor who lives there with his wife, Beverly Burbank, a former student, and works in the adjacent shop and welding room with young assistants, calls his property a sculpture garden. His recent work has been described as protest art. Greenamyer taught at the Massachusetts College of Art for 40 years and founded the school s sculpture department in 1969. He has exhibited and had public art commissions across the country. He has works in the permanent collections of The DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park in Lincoln, The Fuller Craft Museum in Brockton, The Art Complex Museum in Duxbury and Boston University. The biggest piece he has done was in 2002 for the restored Penn Station i

Streetscapes Under Gray Skies: David Campbell Retrospective At The Somerville Museum

David Campbell is starting his sixth decade of painting the city of Somerville.  He’s a house painter – and a streets painter, and a factory-and-junkyard painter, a chain-link fence painter, a roofs and roads and trestles painter.  And above all of these things, he paints skies: strong, pigeon-gray – sometimes smoke-spewed – tumultuous cloudy skies, powerful enough to speed you along on your walk, big enough to remind you that all this stuff down here is really pretty small in the scheme of things. The Somerville Museum has gathered nearly two dozen of Campbell’s realist paintings for a special retrospective entitled “The Art of Observation,” curated by local printmaker and Brickbottom Gallery coordinator Debra Olin.  Campbell is already well-known in art circles – much more than just a “hometown hero” – with works featured at the Smithsonian, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Boston Athenaeum and included in the permanent collections of the Mu

BankGloucester to host Deb Schradieck art exhibit

BankGloucester to host Deb Schradieck art exhibit Community Content BankGloucester will host a public exhibit for artist Deb Schradieck through June 8 in BankGloucester’s lobby on Main Street in Gloucester.  A collection of Schradieck’s paintings will be on display at the bank during that time and are available to purchase. Schradieck is a lifelong artist who primarily is known for her watercolor paintings. She holds a BFA in illustration from Mass College of Art. Schradieck spent most of her life living in central Massachusetts, where she and her husband raised two children in Westborough. Due to their love of boating, they discovered Gloucester. They then docked their boat and had a second home in Gloucester for 10 years. In 2018, they fulfilled their dream and permanently moved to Cape Ann and now reside in Rockport.

Circling the Square: Vaccine, museum events and a call from Drew

Circling the Square: Vaccine, museum events and a call from Drew
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Letter: BHS red raider logo s got to go

The Barnstable Patriot Regarding Jennette Hinkle’s article reprinted from the Cape Cod Times: Understanding now how offensive “red raider” is to the Wampanoag tribe requires that the Barnstable School Committee immediately drop any interest in maintaining the name. Undoubtedly the change.org petition took place prior to participates of the survey knowing how offensive the name is to the Wampanoag. The article spells out quite clearly that the Tribe is upset with being characterized by the color red and as raiders and aggressors in their own land. The red raider name perpetuates a stereotype that is inaccurate and offensive. Banish the mascot for good from our community.

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