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2007 Studio Tour Artists:
1- Don Barr
2- Brenda Beeley
3- Lori Bernstein
4- Mike Biskup
5- Debra Brochin
6- George Chechopoulos
7- Heather Cole
8- Corvidae Press 
9- Diana Cronin
10- Keidren Devas
11- Kate Dwyer
12- David Eisenhour
13- Frank Eliel
14- Rachel Gaspars
15- Myron Gauger
16- Michael Hamilton
17- Phoebe Huffman
18- Charles Iffland
19- Tom Jay &
  Sara Mall Johani

20- Victor Judd
21- Andrea K. Lawson
22- Tim Lawson
23- Caron McCloud
24- Mary Lynn Maloney
25- Walter Massey
26- Elizabeth Merrill
27- Arliss Newcomb
28- Sandra Offutt
29- Jeryl Parker
30- Jerry & Rayetta Perrett
31- Martha Pfanschmidt
32- Diane Porter-Brown
33- Gunter Reimnitz
34- Seth Rolland
35- Henner Schroder
36- Andrew Sheldon
37- Larissa Spafford
38- Janice Speck
39- Janel Swangstu
40- Don Tiller
41- Elaine Treadwell

11 - Kate Dwyer

1231 32nd Street
Port Townsend, WA 98368
Telephone: 360.385.3345
kdwyer@olympus.net
www.katedwyerart.com

Oil paintings on glass

"Dreaming Underwater"

Demonstration:
A charming artist-built studio set in a lush garden full of whimsy---no wonder many visitors think they’ve accidentally wandered into the Secret Garden tour instead of the Studio Tour! Kate will have demonstration materials set up to explain her complicated reverse painting process on plexiglass and glass. Items for sale will include small paintings not available in galleries, new works, seconds and batiks. This year Kate and her husband, Myron Gauger, are doing the studio tour together. Myron will be showing his photo etchings. Kate is represented by Seattle Art Museum Sales Gallery and Williams Gallery in Port Townsend, among others.

Directions to studio:
Take Sheridan Avenue north to 32nd street.  Turn left.  It's the second house on the left  — 1231 32nd street. The Castle Hill bus stops two houses from my place.

Artist statement:
I am a self-taught artist, led to painting from garden making; led to glass initially by its luminosity; lured to stay by the processes I discovered there. Like Wolf Kahn, a painter I greatly admire, “I don’t have ideas; I have appetites.”

Those appetites come first from nature; the rest from tasting the works of many people, places and times in all manner of materials. Having lived with gusto and traveled widely in the world and in books, I can no longer tell which influences are the strongest.

To being a painting is like beginning a good journey. Bring all that you know and let the trip take you.