Joyce Hester, one of 46 artists on this weekend’s Art Port Townsend studio tour, will demonstrate the underpainting technique. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)

Joyce Hester, one of 46 artists on this weekend’s Art Port Townsend studio tour, will demonstrate the underpainting technique. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)

Port Townsend-area artists open their doors

PORT TOWNSEND — Havana; Moscow; Tyler, Texas: A bedroom-turned-studio overflows with images of these places.

Joyce Hester, a painter relatively new to town, rounded them up, from her mind and her travels, to join Art Port Townsend, this weekend’s studio tour.

Hester, whose home studio is in uptown Port Townsend, is among more than 50 artists from Chimacum, Port Hadlock and Port Townsend, Sequim and Port Angeles who’ll give demonstrations, unveil new work and discuss it all with their visitors.

Tour admission is free, details await at northwind arts.org/programs/art-port-townsend and the studios will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

Catalogs, in color and complete with a map, are available at various places around Port Townsend, including the Northwind Arts Center, which also has an Art Port Townsend gallery show at 701 Water St.

“I thought this would be a great way to get some feedback,” said Hester, who added that she’s tough enough to take it.

Recently retired from a career as chief financial officer for a health care system of Texas hospitals, she’s learning about her new hometown. She and her husband have remodeled a 145-year-old house at 938 Jefferson St. to make space for her art studio.

Hester herself has things to teach: During the tour she’ll demonstrate the technique called underpainting and show examples from her work in Cuba earlier this year.

Hester has explored art-making across cultures: She studied art in high school in Milwaukee, went to college in Brownsville, Texas, and lived in Russia during her husband’s posting at the U.S. Embassy there. Her body of work is as varied: an angel statue in a Cuban cemetery that she painted in just an hour; her own kind of “Mona Lisa,” a portrait of her dog Mona; several pictures of Texas longhorn cattle despite their desire to grab the brush out of her hand.

She loved those bovines — used to raise them — but couldn’t take them with her to the Pacific Northwest.

“Now I’m playing with bears,” Hester quipped, showing her visitor a paintings of those beasts lolling around.

To the north, south, east and west of Hester’s place, the art-curious can visit printmakers, watercolorists and potters. Sculptors and artists who mix media also have their doors open, from Mark Fissler’s Terra Forma Studio at 262 Beckett Point Road in Port Townsend to Chuck Iffland’s Mad Monkey Studio at 3820 West Valley Road in Chimacum.

At 403 Sunset Blvd., in Port Townsend’s Cape George colony, painters Linda Tilley and Jinx Bryant share space with Port Angeles printmaker Monica Gutierrez Quarto. Sequim watercolorist and art teacher Shirley Mercer will show her work at the Port Townsend School of the Arts gallery at 236 Taylor St. in downtown Port Townsend. And at Egg & I Pottery, 1461 Egg & I Road in Chimacum, Diana Cronin, Gail Hustedde, Erica Iseminger and Marla Varner are set up.

Corvidae Press, a nonprofit artists’ guild in Building 205 at Fort Worden State Park, is another hot spot. There, visitors can see work by about 20 local printmakers, said board member Margaret Woodcock.

“The fact that we are a working group of guild members makes Corvidae an alluring place,” she said, adding that artists there share their approaches to intaglio, collagraph, relief and mixed-media printmaking.

Organizer Mara Mauch and her crew at Northwind are compiling a list of ways to improve Art Port Townsend in 2019. For that Aug. 17-18 event, the call to artists will go out in late February; submissions close by mid-May. Mauch invites artists with questions about next year’s tour to email her at maram@northwindarts.org.

Meeting a working artist, talking about the creative process: This connection is what the tour’s about, said Mauch. As Art Port Townsend marks its 20th anniversary this year, the event is dedicated to Jeanette Best, who died in November. Passionate advocate for the arts community here, cofounder of the Northwind center and an early orchestrator of Art Port Townsend, she was 79.

“We are eternally grateful to Jeanette,” Northwind executive director Michael D’Alessandro writes in the tour catalog, “for giving us this festival of the arts.”

________

Diane Urbani de la Paz, a former features editor for the Peninsula Daily News, is a freelance writer living in Port Townsend.

Paintings from Havana and uptown Port Townsend plus a self-portrait are among the paintings filling Joyce Hester’s studio. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)

Paintings from Havana and uptown Port Townsend plus a self-portrait are among the paintings filling Joyce Hester’s studio. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)

Painter Joyce Hester is new to Port Townsend, and looks forward to having people over to her studio during the Art Port Townsend tour Saturday and Sunday. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)

Painter Joyce Hester is new to Port Townsend, and looks forward to having people over to her studio during the Art Port Townsend tour Saturday and Sunday. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)

More in Entertainment

Students to lead Studium Generale discussion

The fall series of Studium Generale lectures will finish… Continue reading

“Christmas Girl” by Jennifer Rose is part of the Blue Whole Gallery’s December exhibit, “A Silver Lining.”
Gold-themed event to highlight First Friday Art Walk

The First Friday Art Walk will celebrate with a gold-themed… Continue reading

Santa’s elves during a recent rehearsal of “Sugar Plum Done.” From left, back row, are Piper Bruch, Sapphyre Billman and Sterling Ward. From left, front row, are Jessup Coffin, Rai Warzecha and Zade Harris.
Port Angeles Community Players to stage ‘Sugar Plum Done’

The Port Angeles Community Players will kick off its… Continue reading

Queen of Hearts, from left, includes Karen Laura Peters, Thomas Jennings, Tara Chugh and Carrie Jennings. They will perform at Studio Bob on Friday. (Brittne Lunniss)
Queen of Hearts to perform at Studio Bob

Queen of Hearts will perform at 7 p.m. Friday… Continue reading

Peninsula College to host free murder mystery reading

Peninsula College will host a staged reading of “The… Continue reading

Peninsula College jazz ensemble to host fall concert

The Peninsula College jazz ensemble will present its fall… Continue reading

Auditions set for Port Angeles Community Players production

The Port Angeles Community Players will conduct auditions for… Continue reading

David Louis.
Comic finalists to stand up together at Field Hall

Competitors will be from Canada, Deep South, Brooklyn

Holiday bazaars slated across Peninsula

Holiday arts and crafts fairs will be conducted across the Peninsula this… Continue reading

Flower farmer Laurie McKenzie of Dragonheart Flowers will teach a “Winter Evergreen Wreaths” class Dec. 3 at the nonprofit Northwind Art School in Port Townsend. (Laurie McKenzie)
Nonprofit art school offers arts and crafts workshops

Artist Martha Worthley walked into Northwind Art’s classroom to… Continue reading

Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News
Supaman performs a "Men's War Dance" to a full house on Thursday at the Port Townsend High School auditorium. Supaman, whose real name is Christian Parrish Takes the Gun, is an Apsáalooke rapper and fancy war dancer who grew up in Crow Agency, Mont.
Song and dance

Supaman performs a “Men’s War Dance” to a full house on Thursday… Continue reading

Music on the Straight founders James Garlick, left, and Richard O'Neill, performing at Field Arts and Events Hall in September. The two will return, joined by pianist Jeremy Denk and cellist Efe Baltacigil Nov. 25. (Alex Bodi Hallett)
Concert to honor violist

Quartet composed of Peninsula-borne talent