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to paint some of collectors' favorite subjects.‌
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Thursday, October 5th, 2023

Over the River and Through the Woods

By Kelly Kane

From raging rivers and dramatic waterfalls to idyllic streams meandering through wooded landscapes, these 4 plein air-inspired watermedia paintings feature one of collectors’ favorite subjects. 

“Last Light” (watercolor, 19 x 19 in.) by Deena Ball

“From Above” (acrylic, 9 x 12 in.) by Mark Mehaffey

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“Priest Hole View” (watercolor, 10 x 10 in.) by Laurel Lake McGuire

“Breath of Inspiration” (acrylic, 12 x 16 in.) by Farley Lewis

Follow along as Mark Mehaffey demonstrates his watercolor landscape painting process in “Painting a Dramatic Landscape in Watercolor.”


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Meet Little-Known Master Kate Freeman Clark

By Kelly Kane

Shinnecock Hills Kate Freeman Clark (1874-1957) c. 1902, watercolor on paper, 38 x 34 in. Collection Marshall County Historical Society, Holly Springs, MS

It would be encouraging to find that talented artists are always recognized and the best watercolor painters are always able to exhibit and sell their work. The sad reality is that a fluctuating economy, changing markets, and shifting tastes can work against the success of even the most gifted artists. Add personal misfortunate to the factors working against an artist, and it’s understandable how great painters fade into the dust of history.


Kate Freeman Clark (1875-1957) was one of those promising artists who ended her art career after personal and market challenges. In the 1890s, she was one of the best students in the classes William Merritt Chase taught at the Art Students League of New York and at his Shinnecock summer art school on Long Island, New York, and she described her years with Chase as her happiest and most productive of her life. Unfortunately, Chase’s death in 1916 and the loss of both her mother and grandmother around the same time convinced Clark to put her art supplies and paintings into storage. The crushing loss of those closest to her was exacerbated by a change in popular artistic tastes and the rise of Modern art. She returned to her Holly Springs home and lived the remainder of her life without painting. It wasn’t until her death at the age of 81 that her paintings were rediscovered. Clark left a fund for a gallery, the Kate Freeman Clark Art Gallery, to be established in Holly Springs, Mississippi, that would feature her 1,200 paintings.

William Merritt Chase and Students, Shinnecock Hills ca. late 1890s. Photo courtesy Kate Freeman Clark Collection , Marshall County Historical Society, Holly Springs, Mississippi

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Edited by Kelly Kane

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