Consider sponsoring more of our Participating Artists as a thank you for completing the marathon!
Art work, writing or music not to be reproduced without the artist’s, writer’s or composer’s permission.
Click each item to enlarge and browse as slides
Art flows by artist vertically
Madeline Fan: Seed on the Wind
Madeline Fan: Ants
Madeline Fan: Pollen Grains 2
Jess Weitz: Elemental Print Series: With hand made pigments from soil, metal and plants (Click to View All)
Jess Weitz: Elemental Print Series
With hand made pigments from soil, metal and plants
Timothy J Hayes: En Garde
Hanna Moors: Feet Reading Walden
Hanna Moors: Chinese Pole Shift
Hanna Moors: Seated in Diagonal
Cathy Osman: Daffodils 28″ 24″ o/c
Cathy Osman: Vases 28″ x 24″ o/c
Cathy Osman: Posies 16″ x 20″ oil/clayboard
Nancy Lang: Building a Rainbow
Nancy Lang: A Winter Walk
Nancy Lang: A Cloudy Day
Andrew Clark: Untitled
18×24
Watercolor
Andrew Clark: Morels 12×12 Watercolor
Andrew Clark: “Garp” 12×12 Watercolor
Brent Seabrook: Steel Mill: Blast Furnaces Framed By Lift Bridge Over Cuyahoga River, Cleveland, Ohio
Brent Seabrook: Two Vermont Loggers
Brent Seabrook: Got P.I.?
Rosi Olivan: Indigo Friends
Rosi Olivan: One of many prints…
Rosi Olivan: Almost ready for the exhibition…
Patricia Sheehan: Number of cats may vary Part 1
Patricia Sheehan: Number of cats may vary Part 2
Patricia Sheehan: To our wonderful boy
Lauren Y. Watrous: Green Sally Up, Down, India ink on paper, 11″ x 17″
Lauren Y. Watrous: Hands, India ink on paper, 8.5″ x 11″
Lauren Y. Watrous: Nails, India Ink on paper 8.5″ x 11″
Linda Robeck Fuhrman: MAGA Dictionary Copyright Page
Linda Robeck Fuhrman: What does “all-powerful” mean?
Linda Robeck Fuhrman: Who can be a citizen?
Liza King: Grandpa Lekas in the Russian Army circa 1900
Liza King: The Puodziunas family in Lithuania 1938
Liza King: Eva Zaldokas and her sisters
Sheila Garrett: Scott Nearing
Sheila Garrett: Greta and Jane
victoria loehle
once upon a rainy night – May 2025
(click to read)
victoria loehle
once upon a rainy night – May 2025
victoria loehle: the rainbow bench in the rain
victoria loehle: the trail through the trees
Owen Schuh: Graceful tree with 10 nodes, 2025, clay paint and acrylic on plywood, 12 x 12 x 5 inches
Owen Schuh: Graceful tree with 10 nodes, 2025, clay paint and acrylic on plywood, 12 x 12 x 5 inches
Candace Jensen: Marganimalia (Day 10)
Candace Jensen: Sketch for Weeds & Wilderness (Day 3+)
Ruth Shafer
Ruth Shafer
Larisa Volkavichyute: Nostalgic Still Life
Larisa Volkavichyute
Nostalgic still life
Pastel is, to me, the most passionate, affectionate, and forgiving medium. I love it deeply!
Today’s work unfolded in layers—more and more details emerging from the mist of memory. I had planned to keep going, but something stopped me: the fear of ruining the emotionality already captured. It’s unfinished, yet something in me is attached to the sketch as it is.
Maybe it’s time to start a new one.
To chase the direction I was heading, before the sketch itself began to speak louder than the plan.
Larisa Volkavichyute: Sun Bunnies
Larisa Volkavichyute
Sun Bunnies
When I lived in Russia, it was tradition to drink hot black tea in the morning, and really after every meal. As a child, I was always enchanted by the reflections the tea made — the way the light would catch the surface and cast little playful spots on the wall. We called them sun bunnies.
Even now, whenever I see those little dancing flecks of light, I feel that warm, fuzzy, safe feeling inside. I feel home.
This painting is about that — a still life with a teapot, a teacup, and joyful bunnies hopping all around in light and memory.
Larisa Volkavichyute: Though the cracks. Digital drawing. The cracks in the wall led me to a story of a horse and a girl. The world around me becomes so familiar that even the cracks in the walls start to tell stories and inspire new pieces.
Lauren Olitski Poster: Acrylic on shaped waffleboard all rag paper. 24” x 10”
Lauren Olitski Poster: Acrylic, metallic pigment and plexi on gessoed canvas. 30” x 40”
Lauren Olitski Poster: Acrylic on canvas. 63” x 43”
Deb Brown: The meadow in May