The reflection of a brightly painted boat on the water never gets old…in my humble opinion.

My View of Life on the Dock
The reflection of a brightly painted boat on the water never gets old…in my humble opinion.

Pond residents and visitors soaking up the sun. Good time for a snack.



What’s the best part of this nine year old little leaguer’s performance? The slide? The helmet flip? The chest pound?
Kid just oozes swagger.
Swagger for days.
I just hope he doesn’t face that pitcher in high school.
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On Moorland Rd crossing to the golf course.
Loved seeing the smile Fiesta Committee member Al Millefoglie was wearing as the Procession got underway.
Thank you to the Saint Peter’s Fiesta Committee President Joe Novello and to all the Fiesta Committee members for making this year, and every year, a truly beautiful and unique tradition for Gloucester. The committee members are as follows, and if you see them around town, please thank them:
Joseph Novello – President
Michael Linquata – Vice President
Anthony Cusumano – Treasurer
Rose Aiello – Clerk
Christopher Palazzola – Committee Member
Salvatore Ferrara – Committee Member
Ralph Puopolo – Committee Member
Carlo Barbara – Committee Member
Rose Aiello – Committee Member
Alphonse Millefoglie – Committee Member
Tom Favazza – Committee Member
Lucia Sheehan – Recording Secretary
Photos from Saturday and from Sunday’s closing ceremony are still to come, and then there will be time to go through the footage and we can post the winning walks.
THIS EVENT IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC!
Additionally Sherri Casey from the Rockport Garden Club writes: All RGC members and guests are welcome to attend our July 9 evening meeting at the Rockport Art Association. This should be a beautiful, informative talk by Kim Smith titled, “Beauty on the Wing: Life Story of the Monarch Butterfly.” The evening starts at 6:00 with a wine and cheese reception followed by Kim’s presentation. If you would like to attend but do not drive at night we can arrange for a ride. Please contact Sherri Casey.

The clouds were beautiful as the Horribles Parade was coming to a close, then down on the boulevard the boats in the harbor made for a wonderful sight.

I think we should clean the Back Shore on Saturday by Mooreland Avenue.
When: Saturday, July 7, 2018
Time: 8:00 – 9:00
Where: Back Shore near Mooreland Ave.
Thanks kids
Donna

(Images courtesy of Gallery NAGA – photos: Bill Kipp)
George Nick is a nationally recognized realist painter based in Boston. Blurring the line between realism and expressionism, Nick has described his painting style as intuitive and inventive. What we see between the frames is not a moment frozen in time, but a collection of moments that unify in our mind’s eye. Nick’s paintings are complicated, he is constantly running in circles, following ideas that lead to moments of clarification which, in turn, give birth to a new set of problems and intangible thoughts waiting to be chased down and painted. Nick taught painting at Massachusetts College of Art and Design for twenty-five years. His work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; the Hirschhorn Museum; and the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., as well as many others.
The varied subjects in George Nick’s paintings – ranging from vintage automobiles to Back Bay street scenes, from Venetian waterways to Maine landscapes – reflect his appetite for experimentation. “I’m always reaching out for left-field ideas and approaches, trying to understand what I can do and what I can’t do,” says Nick. This freshness is reflected in Nick’s paint handling, which, always lively and luscious, veers from crisply detailed strokes to broad swaths of color, sometimes within the same piece.
In his 2004 essay on the painting of George Nick, John Stomberg, the Deputy Director of the Williams College Museum of Art, coined the term “existential realism” to describe the particular arena in which Nick operates. Yes, he is a realist, a painter in love with the world and its appearances, and, yes, he is, like the first generation abstract expressionists who were his peers in the 1950s, a painter whose work is a document of his moment-by-moment encounter with the art of painting.
“…George paints like a young man just discovering the appearances of things, discoveries that have nothing to do with the ego of the artist but everything to do with the world’s constant overflow of color and form.” – John Updike
What a honor to meeting Bradley Bagshaw author of the Novel, Georges Bank. Also honored that Mr. Bagshaw used my photo for the cover of this book. By the way, it is a terrific read.




Gloucester Schooners – The Adventure, Thomas Lannon, and Ardelle
2018 Gloucester Schooner Festival Friday August 31st to Monday September 3rd