Enjoy the incredible roster of artists who are connected through the Becket Arts Center.

Artist Directory

Listed Alphabetically

  • Abby DuBow

    In these recent, difficult times I have found strength and fulfillment in the creation of paintings, drawings, and printmaking. I draw inspiration from my environment as well as from my own life experiences. My work has been widely exhibited in the United States and abroad. It is in many public and private collections.

  • Allan Seppa

    I am what may be called a photographer with an eclectic vision. I have been exhibiting my photographs for many years. My body of work includes landscapes, seashore scapes, cityscapes, street photography, travel photography, nature, and still life.

  • Arthur Albert

    I am primarily a landscape photographer. I take pleasure in sharing my travels through my photography.

    I can be reached at 917 757 5773 to arrange a visit to my studio.

  • B. Glee Lucas

    B. Glee Lucas’s detailed paintings celebrate the realization that the light only hits that surface in that way at a single fleeting moment. She captures the passage of time in her works, with the understanding that tomorrow the light may be gone, the sky grey, the wine consumed.

  • Barbara Patton

    “A fiery chaos of flame, smoke and excitement help to create these fragile but hardened objects from the earth.”

  • Carolyn Abrams

    My work is about relationships. Connecting with my creative spirit and the world around me, most especially Mother Nature in all her beauty and her challenges. There is a voice in nature that touches us and connects us to one another in ways that evokes an emotion and stirs the soul. My work is about creating that connection with mediums such as cold wax and oil, acrylics and collage.

  • Claude Beller

    "I look for moments of connection between people, isolated people caught up in their own thoughts and the juxtaposition of diverse faces in a crowded subway car."

  • Cindy Chandler-Guy

    The monotype collages exhibited are inspired by landscapes, cityscapes and still life forms. I utilize the colors, shapes, textures, patterns and the layering of multiple hand inked papers with different markings and degrees of transparency in order to create one of a kind impressionistic and playful compositions. I love the challenge of creating a coherent composition by arranging the variant pieces of the collage together.

  • Glenn Yarnell

    Glenn Yarnell documents architecture in Springfield and wherever he travels. He tries to show the brightness that exists and to show the cityscape in new ways. He hopes his photos give people a chance to think about how they see themselves in the city, and how they see the city in their lives.

  • Harriet Pollack

    “Our eyes can bring us pleasure and I want to stimulate people to LOOK and SEE. I call my creations SOUL SONGS because they are inspired from within.”

  • Ilene Richard

    My figurative work is based on my observations of people involved in everyday activities. I create an emotional connection for not only the viewer but also between the people depicted in my work. A strong design, vibrant color palette and a narrative quality, are what makes my work truly my own.

  • Ingrid Raab

    As a ceramicist I explore physical dimensions of balance, containment and history. My shapes are often reminiscent of ancient functional forms. I interchange contemporary with familiar textures, shapes and materials with the hope of connecting feelings and thoughts in new ways.

  • Iva Kalikow

    I create custom designed stained glass art panels that can be incorporated in windows and doors or displayed as framed works of art. My approach is one of the overall interior design of the room as well as the architectural aspects. My stained glass art panels are created in the traditional lead technique seen for centuries in churches and cathedrals.

  • Ivor Parry

    My paintings and drawings are in various mediums and are about concepts that I find visually interesting. They come mostly from my imagination, that mix real with objective and abstract. Which means that I have no particular style to hang my hat on.

  • Janet Pumphrey

    “I appreciate the ability to manipulate photographs through the artistic imagery available both in-camera and in post-processing, turning what was a realistic photograph into a creative, often abstract or impressionistic work of art.”

  • Joan L. Davidson

    My work is influenced by music and dance. This influence is reflected in the colors I use and the lines, forms and patterns that create a rhythm within the canvas. My work takes the form of landscapes, seascapes, portraits, flowers, and work that combine real and unreal subject matter. The major theme of my recent abstract work is sound and motion. I work in oil, watercolor, and mixed media.

    ArtJoanD@aol.com

  • Joan Dix Blair

    Printmaking is the language I use to explain the world to myself. I ruminate when I see a beautiful object - I take a photograph which I call a 'capture' - as a future subject. My work intends to create a narrative using my environment as language. I live in a rural setting, surrounded by shifting weather, agriculture, and wildlife. These become the subject matter of my work. Often displayed in series, scrolls, or as artist books, my work invites a viewer to read these captured moments in time.

  • Joan Rooks

    “Do you see that ? The way the colors move with the figure ?” Art is vision and experimentation. We are often surrounded by the obscure visual. Putting these “visions “ into structural form is my art my passion. I have never shied away from trying a new technique. Always the one to think , “I can do that ,” drawing, woodblock printing, ceramics, natural sculpture are all a part of my artistic expression.

  • Judith Strauss Koppel

    I have been a visual artist and educator using many varied materials, subjects and styles. One matures, one experiments and changes. I aspire to continue to find pleasure in discovery.

  • Karen Bognar Khan

    I am a contemporary Realist painter interested in creating the “new still life”. I am influenced by the quantum physics and I wish to explore ways of creating environments that help the viewer see the unexpected and hopefully beautiful fusion of disparate objects.

  • Kate True

    Kate True’s lushly painted works maintain the sensual or forceful lines of drawing while creating form and space. In her figures and portraits Kate distills an emotional experience to its most meaningful details, conveying a sense of mood and personality while hinting at the narrative underneath.

  • Katherine Borkowski-Byrne

    Katherine Borkowski-Byrne interprets the natural forces at work within herself or within the landscape. An expressionist artist, she uses spontaneous brushwork and intuitive experimental techniques to create a visual language in oil paint that comes from within and takes the viewer to a realm outside of time.

  • Kathryn Jensen

    "Watercolor is a medium that does what it will. The interplay of control and spontaneity is the joy of the medium."

  • Kent Mikalsen

    “Although professionally trained in sculpture, I have always had an interest in two-dimensional work earning my livelihood as an illustrator and designer.”

  • Kristine Villeneuve-Topor

    I live and breath art. I believe imagination is a vital part of the human spirit. It's an inner life that we all need. I am truly grateful for my gift and that I can share with others. Even if it's for a moment.....there's nothing like touching one's heart, mind and spirit. That is why I create Art.

  • Lou Wallach

    “I create one of a kind pieces made from sustainable wood that are inspired by the material and the environment from which it came. Many designs reflect the natural shapes of plants, stones and water, while others draw on the classical shapes of ancient vessels. Ultimately each piece is meant to bring the nature of the Berkshires into the home. Whether for use, or simply display, they connect to trees and land. I look for the intersection of natural form and imagination that reveals itself as the piece evolves. The wood is my partner in design, it has within it a form that has to be respected and allowed to influence the finished work. Trees are not cut down for my material.”

  • Lydia M. Kinney

    I paint impossible spaces. These environments are imagined as fragmented and disrupted spaces to open their possibility: anything can happen in this space. I employ the freedom of abstraction to detach from the constraints of deepest anxieties. The work is a reference point to my own discomfort and unease, a place to distill both The Worst That Could Happen, and The Best of What’s Possible. It is a place to visualize incongruence, to hold dissonance.

  • Lynne M. Anstett

    Whether I’m traveling far from my native New England, hiking, or standing in my own back yard, I’m drawn to the endless variety of beautiful things outdoors.

    It is a hurried world. Photography, to me, is a way of paying visual attention and tribute to what is otherwise often missed or taken for granted – the quiet dignity of buildings, the magnificence of sky, water and land, the mystery of old things, and the countless daily proofs in nature that the world is made for our eyes.

    I aim to share what I see, by chance or by design, that is beautiful to me. The camera allows me to do that.

    My work focuses on environmental portraits, landscapes, structures, outdoor creatures, farms and edibles. I like to explore beyond the traditional scenes and formats as well.

  • ​Madge Evers

    ​”My work originates with foraged materials and explores memory, adaptation, and decomposition. I use various media, including the cyanotype process and paint, but also spores, the powdery substance that resides in the gills and pores of mushrooms. When released in nature, mushroom spores land on nearby soil, leaves, or rocks, always with the intention of survival. In my process, these tiny reproductive particles fly or float, then alight on to create works on paper. Whether with spores, alternative photographic processes, or paint, my goal is to evoke the familiarity and inherent mysteries of growth and regeneration”

  • Marion Grant

    “Layer and layers of paper, painted, torn, scratched, sanded, and added and subtracted speak to my inner vision. My studio floor and table are a storm of confetti, and no matter how much planning takes place, the end results are always a surprise.”

  • Michael Lampro

    Description goes hereI am a self-taught photographer and often use unconventional angles and close-ups to present the scene or subject in a new and unusual way. Weather and lighting also inspire my creativity. From chasing the late afternoon “magic” light on a summer day, to rushing out after a winter storm, I truly enjoy the opportunity to capture the natural world.

  • Nicole Irene

    "Curious and determined the work I make is a quest through life about life itself; bridging the visual link between microcosm and macrocosm."

  • Olwen Dowling

    "These monotype, dry points, intaglio etchings, a few oils and watercolors will center on this experience and hopefully bring a sense of stillness and quietude to the viewer."

  • Patricia Burson

    Patricia Burson goes to nature to ask the tree how it feels to grow wider season after season, the silvery stream how it is to babble and bounce and giggle over rocks and stones, our golden moon how it feels to eternally wax and wane. “Nature is mundane and profound. That's what I like to paint,” she says.

  • Patricia Crotty

    Patricia Crotty’s color-permeated paintings and mixed-media works hover between representation and abstraction. Inspired by the beauty of nature, she uses paint, drawn line, and collage elements to create multi-layered works, building on what can be seen to explore questions of what lies beyond our perception.

  • Peter Barton

    "I am a filmmaker who loves to shoot stills. I've been doing it for over half a century. My goal has always been to amplify the voices of the forgotten."

  • Polly Kursach

    As I draw, paint or sculpt living creatures I try to identify their “emotional indicators”, that is, what about their external features reveals their internal state.

  • Ruth Rinard

    My grandfather’s farm made me an artist. Golden wheat in the wind, expansive blue sky, billowing clouds, tall yellow tasseled dark green corn, shimmering heat lightning, searing dry heat, or small buildings on the distant horizon filled me with a sense of awe. Awe and intimacy, two constant threads in my work, are held together by narrative. As I start a painting, I have a title or phrase in mind. It becomes the narrative for me linking the deeply personal interior and the unfathomable outer world. My art strives to make visible this connection.

  • Ruth Rosner

    Ruth Rosner’s sculptures are female figures made from rusted metal, found wood, clay, plaster, wire, discarded objects—evocative relics from the street. Totemic figures, they merge with and are transformed by the elements that surround them, becoming voices for the voiceless and the unheard.

  • Sally Lebwohl

    "My landscapes and interiors are inspired by places I have been, and how they have been touched by light. It is a goal to have my work feel fresh and gestural. I never tire of working in pastel, and the saturation achieved with pure pigment on paper. I am always challenged by new subjects, new color palettes."

  • Sam Craig

    “I’ve collected unusual and beautiful pieces of wood for many years. I’d like to think that my art remains closely tied to nature.”

  • Shany Porras

    Shany Porras's abstract paintings visually translate what one feels when listening to music. She started studying classical music when you, which has meant that music remains an essential part of her daily living. She 'sees' music as an abstract language, and she translates music to paintings, much in the same way she would translate one language to another. Shany chooses music that is inspirational to her, selecting music from a variety of genres, including popular and folk music from her home country of Venezuela, and today's popular or politically charged music. Each painting is unique to each musical piece. Her selection of mediums, including acrylic paint, graphite, wax crayons, ink, and spray paint, found objects, etc. hinges on her interpretation of the language of music. Her art is deeply influenced by Bauhaus and the American abstract painters of the 20th century, borrowing from their techniques and applying them as needed to interpret music.

  • Stacey Silkey

    Stacey Silkey is an abstract painter from the Berkshires who focuses on promoting empathy.

  • Sue Fontaine

    Description goes hereThe unfetter of the abandoned landscape. Nature mixed with architectural elements that explore the sense of place with line, texture and paint blending the forgotten landscape with a new topography. The work is created with acrylic paint, graphite pencil drawings, gel transfer and pattern skins on handmade stretched canvas.

  • Susan Miller

    Self Portraits - During the past two years, having spent many hours in isolation, I used the only artist's model I had - myself. The results were 45 self portraits of introspection. The subjects are myself as I would imagine myself to be during a moment of time or experiencing an intense emotion. I used what materials I had at hand, paper and ink.

  • Susan Rostan

    "In these expressions of my emotional responses to my environment, it is not the objects themselves that haunt me, it is the memory of them that incites a visual exploration of their mystery.”

  • Tara Bronner

    Tara Bronner focuses on photographs layered in bright vibrant colors as a way to express the joy and relief of coming out of three long years of the pandemic and to emphasize life affirming beauty that is all around us if we only take the time to look up and away from our screens and step out into world.

  • Thierry Borcy

    My first encounter with black and white photography came about as a teenager. A friend of my parents visited and took photos of my cat. The subsequent prints revealed depth, soul, shapes and textures which were almost palpable. The same way as today I see shape and forms and not so much a tree or a stream. I see black, gray and white where there is color. Paradoxically the art of black and white photography makes me appreciate colors even more.

  • Valerie McQuillian

    My whole life, I have pursued my interest in creating art. I enjoy working in different media and exploring what each has to offer. My subject matter consists of mostly nature, garden and wild flowers, birds and animals, as well as my surroundings. I like to capture the details and complexities of objects or scenes that appeal to me, either from their intrinsic beauty or quality of mood.

  • Wit McKay

    Wit McKay is a visual artist based in northwest Massachusetts. He creates digital collage images, fabricated in the computer from multiple photos gathered in the field. They are presented as large-scale archival pigment prints. His most recent work examines subjects which are ubiquitous, overlooked and mundane. Complexity and contradiction are embraced in his aesthetic. In the everyday he reveals meaning. He transcends the everyday and crafts artworks at once beguiling and confounding. Their rich colors and opulent surfaces are animated by an untethered perspective.

  • Yellowdog

    I use concrete, stone and vintage marbles to create small wall sculptures. As a young child, I was given my grandfather’s childhood marbles which began a lifelong fascination. I especially love the faded colors and patterns of wear of old clay marbles and the beautiful collage effect that is created when they are beside each other. I have collected stones most of my life. I love the way the ocean softens their edges and leaves them glowing at the shoreline. I wander the beaches of the cape and islands looking for perfect stones to incorporate into my work. I am intrigued by the varied colors and textures of schist stone that is quarried in the Berkshire hills and love to recycle leftover bits into my sculptures.