
Core Creek Park

“Intersecting Paths” is my attempt to preserve the quality of light typical of a serene summer evening on Squirrel Island – an island off of Boothbay Harbor (Maine). This is the backyard/field behind the Allen Cottage where my family has been spending summers for nearly 45 years. Usually this field is mown and the site of various lawn games. One summer, the summer of 2020, the grasses were permitted to grow long and wild, with a single path mown through to the rocks on the North Shore. Even though the long grasses made badminton and corn hole tricky, I loved the way the grasses caught the light and shimmered in the ocean breezes.
This version of the Cape May Lighthouse was commissioned recently when I posted the original 11×14 version. The buyer asked if I could paint this on a larger scale. I was thrilled to accommodate and so grateful for the opportunity!
Since getting married on the beach in Cape May Point in June 2021, I have been back to this beautiful peninsula every summer and have always wanted to paint the iconic 157-foot Cape May Lighthouse located within Cape May Point State Park. I am drawn to the simple lines of the lighthouse and the interplay between the man-made structure and its surroundings in the natural world.
I painted this en plein air, on a beautiful late afternoon/early evening in April 2024, as part of AOY Art Center’s Paint Our Towns Plein Air Open. Located in the heart of historic Bucks County, PA and situated on a subdivision of land originally deeded by William Penn to his daughters, Rose Bank Winery is a beautiful estate consisting of a manor house and several outbuildings… a perfect site for painting en plein air!
This painting was painted en plein air on an incredibly windy day in April, 2024, as part of AOY Art Center’s Paint Our Towns Plein Air Open.
This painting was painted en plein air as part of the AOY Art Center Paint Our Towns Plein Air Open in April 2024. As I was painting, I was thrilled to meet a neighborhood resident who turned out to be Shirley Lee Corsey, a third-generation resident of Historic Yardley Borough and a wealth of information about the history of the subject of my painting of Gather Place. Shirley is the Executive Director of Gather Place, the first African American-owned and operated museum in Bucks County, and assumed the role of conservator for the historic African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church which now is home to the museum.
Following is an excerpt from https://gatherplace.org/
“The African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church in Yardley is a testament to the area’s rich history, tracing back to its origins in 1682 when Quaker William Yeardley founded the village. Continuing this legacy, William’s nephew, Thomas Yardley, further developed the village into what became known as Yardleyville in the early 1700s. The A.M.E. Church of Yardley property predecessors’ ownership ties directly back to Thomas Yardley, George Yardley, and Charles Yardley when this property was called the Boatyard lot. The Eastburn family (also Quakers) owned a hay press barn here, that also served as a gathering place for African American worshippers, named the “Free Peoples Church”, then The Colored Church, established in 1817. Thus, this church played a vital role in Yardley’s Underground Railroad legacy, offering solace and support during tumultuous times. In July 2022, Shirley Lee Corsey, a third-generation resident, became the legal conservator of this historic landmark. Established in 1877 by African American A.M.E. congregants from Trenton, New Jersey, the church now serves as the headquarters for Gather Place, a non-profit organization. Its inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places further underscores its significance in preserving Yardley’s legacy and its ties to the Underground Railroad.”