From Ireland to Italy: Five artists explore new creative territory at Courthouse Gallery
Richard Keen, Blue Moon
There’s something quietly revolutionary happening at Courthouse Gallery Fine Art in Ellsworth this month, where five artists have gathered to present work that defies the comfortable boundaries of their established styles. “New Work,” running June 2 to 29, offers a fascinating glimpse into the creative restlessness that drives artists to push beyond familiar territory — and the results are nothing short of captivating.
The journey begins with Rick Fox, whose recent residency at Cill Rialaig in Ireland this past February sparked an unexpected transformation in his artistic vision. Known for his plein-air landscapes and portraits, Fox found himself drawn to something entirely different during those misty Irish days. The forms he began sketching organically reached skyward, building vertically in ways that felt, as he describes it, “very flowerlike.” Rather than dismiss this intuitive shift, Fox embraced it fully upon returning to his studio, deliberately introducing fresh flowers as subjects and diving headfirst into botanical territory.
Rick Fox, Bouquet
The resulting works, particularly “Spring Burst” and “New Bloom,” represent a bold departure that feels both surprising and inevitable. These large canvases explode with armloads of colorful blooms, each flower rendered with the same confident brushwork that made Fox’s landscapes so compelling. It’s a testament to artistic courage — the willingness to follow an unexpected creative thread wherever it might lead.
Philip Frey’s contribution to the exhibition demonstrates a different kind of artistic evolution, one rooted in his fascination with complex compositional challenges. His paintings of Maine’s working waterfronts have always showcased his ability to navigate intricate arrangements of angles and geometric forms, but a recent trip to Italy added new layers to his visual vocabulary. The intensity of Italian light, particularly as it dances across narrow Roman streets and terracotta rooftops, clearly captivated Frey’s compositional sensibilities.
In works like “Café Roma” and “From the Terrace,” Frey captures the way Mediterranean light creates “all manner of layered shapes and angles,” transforming architectural elements into a symphony of geometric relationships. These paintings feel like visual jazz — improvisational yet structured, spontaneous yet carefully orchestrated.
The gallery welcomes newcomer Richard Keen, whose recent relocation from Dresden to Surry has infused his abstract work with fresh perspective. Keen’s exploration of the relationship between place and perception takes on new urgency in pieces like “Orchard Shadows No. 3,” where bold primary colors and geometric forms create a dialogue between the familiar and the unknown. His nocturnal palette in works such as “Echo Lake, Acadia” and “Blue Moon” reveals an artist grappling with the mystery of new surroundings.
“Blue Moon” proves particularly intriguing in its combination of brightly lit green grass (created with roller technique) against midnight blues and teals, punctuated by stark trees tinged in pink. The result is a landscape that feels both inviting and foreboding — a perfect metaphor for the experience of discovering new territory, whether geographical or artistic.
In the annex gallery, John Neville brings his distinctive humor and maritime heritage to life through paintings that celebrate the fishing culture of his childhood village, Hall’s Harbour, Nova Scotia. Neville’s instantly recognizable palette of red, blue and green serves as the foundation for narratives that range from nostalgic to playfully absurd. “Heads or Tails” epitomizes his whimsical approach — depicting a fisherman standing waist-deep in the sea, holding a fish head in one hand and a fish tail in the other. Is it one fish or two? Neville seems to delight in keeping us guessing.
The pairing of Neville’s vibrant maritime scenes with Andre Benoit’s eclectic wood assemblages creates an engaging dialogue between two-dimensional narrative and three-dimensional whimsy. Benoit’s sculptural works featuring fishermen, fish, owls and birds complement Neville’s painted stories, creating a comprehensive celebration of coastal life that feels both authentic and imaginative.
What makes “New Work” particularly compelling is not just the individual strength of each artist’s contribution but the way their collective exploration of new territory creates a broader conversation about artistic growth and creative risk-taking. These are established artists choosing to venture beyond their comfort zones, and the results demonstrate the vitality that comes from embracing uncertainty.
An artist reception from 5 to 7 p.m. June 11 offers an opportunity to engage with these works in person and perhaps catch the artists themselves reflecting on their creative journeys. In a cultural landscape often dominated by predictable formulas, “New Work” stands as a refreshing reminder that the most interesting art often emerges when artists dare to surprise themselves.
Courthouse Gallery is at 6 Court St., Ellsworth, with gallery hours Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, call 207-667-6611 or visit www.courthousegallery.com.