Artist to discuss inspiration in Sunday talk

Chimacum-based printmaker Kelli MacConnell will give a free talk Sunday at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery, 701 Water St. in Port Townsend. (Dina Ávila)

Chimacum-based printmaker Kelli MacConnell will give a free talk Sunday at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery, 701 Water St. in Port Townsend. (Dina Ávila)

PORT TOWNSEND — Some ask this artist: Why make a linocut print, instead of a painting? It’s the surprise part, Kelli MacConnell answers. The many unpredictable factors — and the improvisation — in linocut printmaking continue to thrill her.

MacConnell, a full-time artist and mother who lives in Chimacum, will give a free artist talk on Sunday at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery, 701 Water St. The 3 p.m. discussion of printmaking, inspiration and the creative process will be open to the public, with questions encouraged.

For more information, visit NorthwindArt.org.

MacConnell’s large-scale, two-tone creations, including “Take to the Sea,” “Moonlit” and “Gold Giant Redwood,” are on view in the Northwind gallery’s “Showcase 2025” exhibition. This show, on view through Sept. 8, is devoted to 14 local artists, who also include painters, sculptors, a ceramicist, a photographer and a mosaicist.

About her printmaking practice, MacConnell added: “I also enjoy the meditative, meticulous process of cutting away the unessential. With the simple use of line and the contrast of black and white, I strive to create powerfully graphic compositions inspired by the natural world.”

MacConnell grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio, and became an avid outdoorswoman, through-hiking the Appalachian Trail and trekking sections of the Pacific Crest Trail. She made her way to Oregon and Portland State University, where she earned her bachelor of fine arts degree and discovered her passion for printmaking.

The artist still travels, showing her work in some of the country’s premier fine art and crafts shows, and spending time in the woods and near the ocean.

MacConnell is dedicated these days to creating “original, introspective art in hopes that it will speak beyond the frame, fostering a healthier relationship between humans and nature.”

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