The first in a four part series
Finally I got to interview one of my favorite artists. I hope you enjoy this series as much as I enjoyed conducting it.
My View of Life on the Dock
The first in a four part series
Finally I got to interview one of my favorite artists. I hope you enjoy this series as much as I enjoyed conducting it.
Lisa Bruce a local seamstress, knitter, nanny, housewife, mainer-at-heart sells beautiful
She has a very reasonably priced ETSY store where you can find her vibrantly colored and designed creations like these-
Click the picture above to check out her ETSY store
Lisa also has a blog which she infrequently updates but you may find interesting-
Here’s a very scarce book on artist Jane Peterson who painted in Gloucester in the early 20th century. The book is one of only 500 ever printed and they are each individually numbered inside.
A simple Google Search Of Jane Peterson Turns up many auctions in which her paintings sell for over $500,000 like this one-
From the Christie’s web site-
Lot Description
Jane Peterson (1876-1965)
Gloucester Harbor–Late Afternoon
signed ‘Jane Peterson’ (lower left)
oil on canvas
30¼ x 40 in. (76.8 x 101.6 cm.)
Lot Notes
During the first half of the twentieth century, one of the most socially acceptable venues for women to express their creativity was through participation in the male-dominated world of the fine arts. Jane Peterson, a fixture on the American art scene, had an unwavering devotion to her sense of self as an artist. She subsequently developed an Impressionist-Fauvist style that is uniquely her own. Peterson’s body of work encompasses scenes of gardens and beaches, colored umbrellas, and sun drenched port settings. Among the finest of her career, Gloucester Harbor exemplifies the artist’s frequent depiction of natural beauty using brilliant colors and active brushwork.
Peterson’s determination to be an artist began at a young age. When she was eighteen, she moved from Elgin, Illinois to New York and in 1896, she began her formal training at the Pratt Institute under the instruction of Arthur Wesley Dow. In 1901, Peterson studied with Frank DuMond at the Art Students League. Over the next decade Peterson held various teaching positions that brought her to Boston and Maryland. During this time she continued her studies at the Art Students League as well as with the leading European artists of the period such as Frank Brangwyn, Jacques-Emile Blance and Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida in Paris, Venice and Madrid. She also traveled extensively throughout North Africa visiting exotic locales such as Biskra, Algiers and Cairo.
Upon her return to the United States, Peterson continued her travels. After visiting the pacific Northwest with artist and friend Louis Comfort Tiffany, she frequented the various artist’s colonies that dotted the Massachusetts coast line including Gloucester and Martha’s Vineyard. Drawing inspiration from her travels both domestic and abroad, Peterson produced a diverse body of work that she exhibited at various institutions such as the Société des Artistes Francais, St. Botolph Club in Boston, the Art Institute of Chicago and in 1915 at the Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.
In Gloucester Harbor, Peterson employs grand brush strokes and an assertive line, creating a mosaic effect of highly expressive tones of blue, pink and yellow offset by pure whites. Peterson’s style had become very definitive and has been described by Jonathan J. Joseph: "Her linear construction directed a viewer along a definite course and did not allow the viewer’s attention to wander. Her tonal masses dominated lines and defined form, while subtle, thin oscillating lines emphasized form edges to better display the juxtapositioning of dark and light color areas. In some ways, Peterson’s paintings resemble cloisonné, in that color is often surrounded by a thin outlining of charcoal or contrasting paint much like the thin wires of cloisonné surround enamel. However, lines do not encompass or totally contain color areas, but combine in a grand decorative order and show control in carefreeness. The work of Peterson becomes a sensuous place in the commonplace movements of nature." (Jane Peterson: An American Artist, Boston, Massachusetts, 1981, p. 17)
Large canvases such as Gloucester Harbor emphasize Peterson’s bold and unique brushwork and present her skills at their best. The innovative stylistic elements found in Gloucester Harbor are the fundamental characteristics of Peterson’s painting style that achieved critical acclaim. One reviewer in 1917 noted, "Miss Jane Peterson uses strong colors and broad brush to give the facts about docks and fishing craft and harbours in a somewhat knock-you-down fashion." (as quoted in Jane Peterson: An American Artist, p. 32)
Johnathan Joseph has confirmed the authenticity of this work.
Department Information
As I wander through and say hey to Bob Ritchie at his Dogtown Book Shop in the heart of beautiful Downtown Gloucester I can’t help but wonder how one ever could walk away from such a labor of love. It’s obvious Bob has a passion for books. The shelves are stocked with hard to find,significant or interesting books. I wonder how does someone value a business like this and turn it over to someone else when it’s an incredible amount of work and passion that went into building it?
Wouldn’t it have to be someone that took it over that would have that same kind of passion for the same type of material and is there someone out there that exists that could possibly put in one tenth of the passion to make the transition and keep the joint running?
I hope so, because places like the Dogtown Book Shop are real treasures to a community.
The Hive Cape Ann highlights John Monte who makes his own surboards in his spot off of East Main St. Check out the interview at The Hive Blog

John Monte Pic By Jonathan Kozowyk
I’ve beat myself up for years considering getting a tattoo. For years what held me back was the lack of something that I really really wanted to put on myself permanently. Now that years have gone by and I’ve been in the lobster business for so long I’ve been wanting to get a lobster tattoo.
I have the exact design that I want and I know who I would go to -Molly at Witch City Ink but a couple of things have prevented me from doing so. One, I don’t know exactly where I’d put it. You see I have skinny forearms, and not only are they skinny but they are somewhat hairy. Gross, right? Who would want to look at a tattoo with hair growing out of it?
Anyway the design that I want features a traditional lobster from the overhead perspective. The one with the claws right out in front of it in a straight line. then I would like a scroll banner with Madeline written on one above the lobster and Eloise on a scroll banner below.

Well enough about me. Do you have a tattoo? Have you ever had any desire to get one but chickened out? If you did get one what would it be?
Trapper’s new tattoo to honor his late father
Fresh Ink
Here is a link to all of our posts from on the set of the Adam Sandler Movie Grown Ups which filmed here last Summer. You can see many of the locations we took pictures last summer that are in the trailers
https://goodmorninggloucester.wordpress.com/?s=Grown+Ups&x=16&y=11
Hi Joey,
Tom and Lisa from the amazing “LOBSTER POOL” restaurant have been coming into the store for many years purchasing flags. This year after no luck finding a pre-made lobster flag for the restaurant I offered to paint one for them.
Should be flying there this weekend. It was a lot of fun creating this for them.
I think after this hand painting flags will be a new item for the shop.
Thanks and hope to see you soon.Pauline Bresnahan
PAULINE’S GIFTS
From Deb Clarke;
for a brief moment i thought to throw this painting away. and i begin the sharpie series. documentation of drawings to appear on a new tab “Sharpie Drawings”
Here’s to a great season down on Rocky Neck. Brenda just got back from a six month stint in Thailand. Check out more on Brenda here
A tour Inside Glazed!
God Help Me If My Wife Finds Out You Can Bring Your Own Bottle Of Wine Into This Joint.
Look for Part III of our interview with Roselle at Glazed Paint Your Own Pottery Tonight right here on these pages.
Glazed Paint Your Own Pottery Studio, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

C. B. Fisk, Inc. cordially invites you to our workshop to see and hear Opus 138
A two manual, 28-stop organ for First Presbyterian Church Incheon, South Korea
Saturday June 12, 2010
2:00 pm – 6:00 pm
21 Kondelin Road
Gloucester, MA
Rte.128 to Rte. 133, East 1 mile
Right on Magnolia Avenue, 1 mile
Right on Kondelin Road, 1/2 mile
I caught the Hanneke Cassel performance this past Saturday as the Rockport Performance Center tuned the new hall.
Imagine this nice performance but instead of the muddled acoustics of Passims you have the absolute clarity of a finely tuned musical instrument which is what the Shalin Liu Performance Center in Rockport is today.
Agent 99 over on Cape Anne online said it best:
I’m so in awe of this beautiful new venue. What an incredible treasure to the town. We also had the good fortune to catch Cassel’s performance at 6 and loved every second. She’s got that wonderful blend of raw talent and charisma. We will definitely look for her again. The size of the room just makes it feel all the more intimate. The sound is perfect. A person on stage can whisper with no microphone and someone in the last seat of the mezzanine can hear it perfectly. The design is beyond beautiful. They’ve used slate in an undulating pattern on the walls to create one of the acoustic elements but is visually stunning as well. On stage what looks like an undulating wall of stone actually slides open hiding a glorious grand piano that can glide on and off stage with the touch of a finger. Verklempt!
Shalin Liu: How do you pronounce it? Hanneke asked this question between sets and the answer was that I have been mispronouncing it. The answer is British footwear in a bathroom. That’s right, “Shoe in loo”. Sorry about that but you will now never mispronounce it again but you will never forgot my dumb mnemonic. What really blew me away is how enormous the space is when compared to the lot size they shoe horned this building into. Truly an architectural feat. (Oh wait, shoe horned in, small space, feat, I feel a bad pun attack … )
OK, so this is me being a jackass right before the start of the concert. You can see how the side doors open to get the piano, or chairs. You can also see the weaved shutter which covers the huge window backstage.

Fiddlers on stage window shuttered:

Fiddlers on stage window open:

This window is going to be even more impressive once the scaffolding outside the building is removed.
They were so good we bought two CDs and Hanneke autographed them for my daughter. I had to drive my son up to Vermont back to college and fiddle music was a pleasant way to enjoy the drive through the Berkshires.
From deb Clarke;

Visit Bananas to get a better look at it;
78 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930(978) 283-8806
Also visit Bananas Facebook Page by clicking the link below
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=68449294214
What Up Homie?, originally uploaded by captjoe06.