Annapolis artists opens West Ocean City
gallery
By Lisa Capitelli
(July 21, 2006) Some people in the
area may not have heard of painter Liz Lind just yet, but
they will soon find out about the watercolorist, now that
she has opened a gallery featuring her artwork in West
Ocean City.
Wit galleries already established in Annapolis
and Edgewater, Md., Ocean City marks the third location
for Liz Lind Editions, which just opened three weeks ago
in the Decatur Business Center on Route 611.
Lind said she designed her new 1,200 square-foot
showroom to be friendly because she doesn’t like “intimidating” galleries.
“I like people to feel like art
is for everyone. I think the important thing is how
it makes you feel, and you shouldn’t feel intimidated
by it or about buying it,” Lind says. “You
should buy what you like and what makes you feel good. That’s
why I have happy, cheerful colors. I want people
to feel like they can come in, look around and have a good
experience.”
Lind said she is happy to be here and
likes the feeling of Ocean City. She wanted to bring
her artwork to the coastal area because it is her target
market and because her husband, Gordon Harrington, was
born and raised in Ocean City. She would also eventually
like to move here.
“I think it’s a good market
for my work,” Lind said. “In the Baltimore
Washington area, they know my work and there is a demand
for it in Annapolis. I think people down Here don’t
know about me yet, but hopefully will soon. There
have been people who’ve come in here and say, ‘oh,
I know all about you, I’ve been to your gallery.’”
From drawing in spiral notebooks
when she was 5 years old to painting with watercolors today,
Lind, 48, has been applying her talent for more than 40
years. Lind thinks she got some of that talent from
her mother’s side of the family.
“There were a lot of artists on
my mother’s side and I think I got it from them,” Lind
said. “I have always painted or drawn. I
always had the feeling or the need to draw. At 5,
I wasn’t good, but I just had to do it. It’s
just the way of expressing yourself and that was my way,
I guess.”
Lind said she would get jobs especially
at frame shops, so she could be around art and learn how
to frame and about the gallery business.
Ironically, Lind’s parents didn’t
want her to be an artist. She said they wanted her
to have a career where she would have a steady income. However,
in 1984, Lind and her mother opened the Annapolis gallery
together. Lind also opened the Edgewater gallery
in 2003.
The galleries showcased the work of work
of various artists, but because Lind’s own work own
work sold so well, she opted to solely exhibit her artwork. Nearly
five years ago, Lind began creating prints of her originals
to build an inventory. Lind also offers custom framing
at all three galleries.
Her two galleries have grown over the
years and Lind just received the “Best Of” award
in Annapolis for her artwork. One of he local magazines
takes a poll from the general public in different categories
and Lind won for “Best Visual Artist.”
“It was a big honor because it was
totally unsolicited,” Lind said. “There
was no roster that people could choose from. The
general public has to come up with you and vote. I
was really honored because it wasn’t the magazine
that named me, it was the people in Annapolis.”
Lind’s original paintings are very
hard to come by and she gets calls from eager buyers wanting
to know when one will be available. But, the Giclee
(Iris Giclee is the highest quality print available) prints
she has look exactly like the originals.
One-third of the originals she creates
in a year are donated to charity to be auctioned off. She
makes prints of those originals to sell. Some of
her paintings have been auctioned for as much as 4,000,
unframed. The latest large, unframed framing painting
she sold went for about the same.
If there is one thing that Lind wants
people to know about her paintings is that it is good artwork
to live around and to have in a home.
“I have people that come in all
the time and tell me how happy my paintings make them and
their family, and that makes me feel great,” Lind
said. “My paintings are happy and have a lot
of movement or action. I like think that they are
fresh.”
Lind said she enjoys painting water and
anything related to it such as surfing, boats, waves, beach
scenes and sea mammals. She also enjoys painting
flowers. Lind is planning to paint a series of pieces
depicting Ocean City. “Ocean City will produce
some really nice pieces because it is just so much more
laid back,” she said.
In the Ocean City gallery, Lind also has
gift items including note cards and coasters featuring
her artwork. She also has handmade purses, porcelain
seashells, gift card, Elena Lara semiprecious stone jewelry,
journals and Anne Taintor magnets.
The gallery is currently open Monday through
Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and on Sundays, from about
11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.. For more information about
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