Art Shop Gallery
202 W. Pioneer Ave.
New work by Ed Tussey
5-7:30 p.m., First Friday Opening Reception
Lifelong Alaskan Ed Tussey started his art career in Kodiak at a young age and now lives in Homer. A winner of national and state awards, Tussey is a freelance artist who captures on canvas the majesty of Alaska’s interior, coastal and marine environments and wildlife. Using acrylic paint, he carefully defines and realistically portrays birds and mammals in their natural settings. This exhibit shows his latest work as well as current and hard-to-fine prints.
Bunnell Street Arts Center
106 W. Bunnell Ave.
Textiles by Amy Meissner
Metalsmithing by Mary Kaye Denkewalter
5-7 p.m., First Friday Opening Reception; 6 p.m., artists talk
Textile artist Amy Meissner primarily works with hand stitching, which she calls “a quiet skill that feels tenuous, nearly lost when placed in a contemporary context.” The connotation of quilts as protective, warm and soothing is something that begs to be pushed against, she writes in her statement. “I sew because I don’t know what it is to not sew, despite the connotation of ‘minor art’ or ‘women’s work,’” she writes. “I take the traditional, beautiful handwork that I was taught as a girl, then later as a professional seamstress, and couch it within the painful or frightening or uncomfortable. I cut myself apart. I sew myself together.”
Mary Kaye Denkewalter teaches metalsmithing and jewelry at East Anchorage High School. Previously she had been known as a textile artist; she said that she quickly developed a love of the art of metalsmithing. As a former textile artist, she said she couldn’t resist bringing some of those surfaces into her work.
“Metal is a way for me to interpret what I see in my mind, thus projecting it onto a piece of pliable metal with basic form and texture at the center of my jewelry. I play a lot in this series with the negative and positive space and shapes of my forms,” she writes. “The creative process for me is an extension of who I am. I need to have a challenge that takes my ideas from the two-dimensional thought processes through to the finished three-dimensional object. I feel that I need to continually keep creating to keep in touch with who I am as an artist and a person.”
Fireweed Gallery
475 E. Pioneer Ave.
Different Strokes, by Sandra Falkner-Chandler
5-7 p.m., First Friday Reception
Wasilla artist Sandra Falkner-Chandler presents Alaska themed works in many mediums, including acrylic, pen and ink, graphite, and mixed media. She said she admits to rarely working with only one medium at a time and describes her show as “both clean and soft lines, and juicy colors in progress at the same time.” Falkner-Chandler also works in therapeutic art that she provides through Matsu Regional Hospital and Valley Hospice Resources. Her work is on exhibit through July 1.
Homer Council on the Arts
344 W. Pioneer Ave.
Paper or Plastic, by Desiree Hagen
5-7 p.m., First Friday Reception
Known primarily for her paper cutting collages, Desiree Hagen branches out into an exploration of natural (paper) and synthetic (plastic) materials, including two-dimensional, as well as sculptural and wearable art. She also employs and experiments with decoupage, sewing, mold making and casting.
Homer Elks Lodge
215 Jenny Way
Paint In by Gus Beck
5-9 p.m., First Friday
Homer Elks Lodge continues its summer First Friday Paint In, this week with art by Gus Beck. Beck will paint a 7-foot-by-4-foot canvas on the back deck of the Elks from 5-8 p.m., and the painting then is auctioned off at 9 p.m. “I was born in Homer, where I continue to have a good time,” Beck said.
Homeric Traders Marketplace
1130 Ocean Drive
New works by Nicole Wall
Artist Nicole Wall with Moose Haves, “crafty creations fur the cute and wild,” shows her work. A newer gallery venue, Homeric Traders is on Ocean Drive across from the Homer Farmers Market.
Pratt Museum
3779 Bartlett Street
Watermark, oil paintings by Asia Freeman and digital video by Michael Walsh
5-7 p.m., Opening reception, Thursday; exhibit also showing until 7 p.m. Friday
Artists Asia Freeman and Michael Walsh present a duo show of their connections to the local landscape through painting and digital images. The artists have shared a studio for several years and have collaborated before on shows, including “Backyard, Alaska,” a 2010 Pratt show. “They also share a sensual language of mark making with a focus on water as media and muse,” they write of their work. “Watermark centers on artwork that hovers between pure abstraction and natural realism.” The show opens today and remains on exhibit through Aug. 2. The show also includes music by Joe DeCino originally composed for one video piece by Walsh.
Ptarmigan Arts Back Room Gallery
471 E. Pioneer Ave.
Neptune’s Treasure, a solo exhibition by Jean Steele
5-7 p.m., First Friday Reception
Homer artist Jean Steele writes that her “lifetime love with clay has morphed into a meditation. A playful one.” The result is what she calls “sea bowls.”
“At the time I was just reminded of water in its various forms, specifically, ocean water. I often thought of tempestuous seas and calm seas and stormy seas, the metaphors for life as a human, whose body is made of 75 percent water,” she writes.
Her show, Neptune’s Treasure, consists of ceramic bowls, but she also includes found driftwood sculptures that have been painted and enhanced with wire, thread and yarn.