Celebrate Wearable Art
Hear from the artists featured in seARTS’ Wearable Art Show

The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present highlights from seARTS’ 2015 Celebrate Wearable Art III show including an expert panel discussion on fashion and wearable art’s place on Cape Ann and beyond. This program will take place on Thursday, October 1 at 7:00p.m and is offered in collaboration with seARTS. Tickets are $10 Museum members/$15 nonmembers. Reservations are required. Please contact (978) 283-0455 x10 or info@capeannmuseum.org for tickets and reservations. Tickets can also be purchased online at Eventbrite.
For information about the Celebrate Wearable Art III show on September 27, please contact seARTS directly at (978)281-1222.
Whether born, working or living on Cape Ann, the panelists of Celebrate Wearable Art have used their skills in varying ways. Hear from ceramicists, jewelry-makers, fashion designers and metal smiths at the beginning of their careers or some with over thirty years of experience.
The Celebrate Wearable Art expert panel discussion will be moderated by George Summers, fiber artist and retail shop manager for the Boston Society of Arts and Crafts and Gail McCarthy, Arts Editor for the Gloucester Daily Times. Panelists, including Diane K.W., Beth Williams and Jen Greeke will discuss their inspiration, techniques and process. On display will be the wearable art of panelists K.W. and Greeke, as well as Camilla MacFadyen, Richard Crangle and Donna Caselden.
9-11 to the Present: the State of Intelligence and National Security
Lecture by Mary Margaret Graham
Thursday, October 1, 2015, 7PM at The Cultural Center at Rocky Neck
6 Wonson Street, Gloucester, MA 01930 • Gallery hours, Thurs-Sun, 12:00-6:00 PM
The Rocky Neck Art Colony welcomes back Mary Margaret Graham to lecture on the state of intelligence and national security in the post/9-11 age almost 15 years since the terrorist attack on American soil.
About Mary Margaret Graham
Education
Mrs. Graham is a graduate of Marywood College in Scranton, Pennsylvania and obtained a Masters degree in Russian Studies at The Maxwell School of Syracuse University. She and her husband, Ian, live in Ipswich, Massachusetts.
Career
In May 2005, Mary Margaret Graham was appointed as the first Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Collection. In this role, she worked on behalf of the Director of National Intelligence to conceptualize and manage DNI oversight of intelligence collection programs across the IC. She was responsible for developing a dynamic, enterprise approach to intelligence collection as well as planning for future intelligence capabilities to ensure national priorities were reflected in systems acquisition decisions.
Mrs. Graham previously served as CIA’s Associate Deputy Director for Operations for Counterintelligence. In her 29+ years with the CIA she had numerous field and headquarters assignments. From 1999 to 2001, Mrs. Graham served as Chief of the National Resources Division; from 1998 to1999 she served as the Deputy Chief of the Europe Division. She also served as the Executive Assistant to William Crowell, then Deputy Director of the National Security Agency, in the mid-1990s.
Following her retirement, Mrs. Graham was a Visiting Fellow at Harvard’s JFK School of Government.
Honors and Awards
Mrs. Graham has earned several prestigious medals for her service: the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal and the Distinguished Career Intelligence Medal in 2008, the Secretary of Defense Medal for Meritorious Civilian Service in 2008, the Intelligence Medal of Merit in 2005, the Donovan Award in 2001, and the National Intelligence Medal of Achievement in 1996.
Current Activities
Mrs. Graham currently serves on the Board of Directors of the CIA Officers Memorial Foundation as well as on the Board of Directors of the National Intelligence University Foundation. In addition, she serves on the Intelligence Advisory Board for The Mitre Corporation. Mrs. Graham is also a docent at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts and is a member of the MFA’s Patron Steering Committee.
Artist Katherine Chang-Liu Lecture
“Influences and New Realism”
at the North Shore Arts Association
“Influences and New Realism”, nationally acclaimed Artist Katherine Chang-Liu will give a Lecture at the North Shore Arts Association, Gloucester, MA, Thursday, October 1, at 7 pm, with Introduction by renowned Rockport artist Ron Straka. Admission is $20 per person. Early ticket purchase strongly suggested – Seating Limited. Net proceeds to benefit NSAA
For California based artist Katherine Chang-Liu, painting begins with the concept, an idea drawn from personal experience, which she expresses through an abstract assemblage of color and shape. What is especially fascinating in Liu’s work are the details that lead to reflections about the unfinished state of things. She says that the West is obsessed with time, and asks how would our perception and goals change if we were to be defined by our pace? You can say that Katherine Chang-Liu’s work encourages us to pace life, to return to introspection, examine the past, and in general, to slow down.
Chang-Liu’s work has won 49 awards, been featured in 40 books and 98 magazine or newspaper articles. A recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, her work can be found in over 1100 public, private and corporate art collections. In 2012 Ms. Chang-Liu received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Watercolor USA Honor Society.
The North Shore Arts Association’s galleries are open, free to the public, Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, Noon to 5 p.m. More information on all North Shore Arts Association events is available by visiting their website at www.nsarts.org, and by email at arts@nsarts.org, or by telephone 978 283-1857.
Neil Linsenmayer Solo Show
at North Shore Arts Association
North Shore Arts Association presents Rockport artist (and former CIA Analyst), Neil Linsenmayer in a fascinating solo show he has entitled “Going Back in Time.” Come ‘imagine history’ through the eyes of an artist whose work has graced the covers of many Cape Ann community publications including North Shore Magazine. Exhibition runs Thursday, October 1 – Sunday, October 24.
Neil Linsenmayer is intrigued by the subtle ways in which light, color and shape interact especially as reflected in the natural sea and landscapes of Cape Ann.
He shares, “whenever I come upon a scene that cries out to be painted, it is almost always because of something unusual in the interplay of these elements – the way light reflects off one surface onto another, changing its color, luminosity and character. Light and color give form to objects and are vital to creating the illusion of space. They are key to recreating the mood of the scene, be it lively, serene, or somber.”
Linsenmayer’s paintings often feature old and worn objects, particularly architectural and marine objects that reflect the stories their age has to tell. He says, “The challenge is to bring out the essential dignity in these worn objects, and to invite the viewers to join me in imagining their history.”
The North Shore Arts Association’s galleries are open, free to the public, Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, Noon to 5 p.m. More information on all North Shore Arts Association events is available by visiting their website at www.nsarts.org, and by email at arts@nsarts.org, or by telephone 978 283-1857.





