Canterbury, New Hampshire sculptor Carol Lake has just returned from the annual Animal Art Fair in Paris, a juried international exhibition of animal artists in all mediums, where she was the only American out of the 60 in attendance. Lake’s sculptural practice is rooted in over 45 years of hands-on experience in farming and the equine industry, where she developed an intimate understanding of animal anatomy, movement and spirit. As a farmer, she spent decades reading the subtle language of animals and “assessing health through touch, observing the poetry of posture, and forming deep bonds with creatures in my care,” said Lake. This hard-won anatomical knowledge now flows directly into her sculptural work. “Each sculpture becomes an act of communion — a way to once again feel the weight, warmth, and essence of animals I no longer physically tend,” she explained. “Through clay, I … [Read more...] about CORNERED: CAROL LAKE
January/February 2026
Welcome
2026, anyone? At the start of October, Elizabeth Michelman proposed reviewing the “Unspoken Resilience: Healing from the Lewiston Shooting Two Years In: Work by Artists of the Maine & National Deaf communities and Photographs by Michael Kolster” exhibition at the University of New England Art Gallery in Portland, Maine. It was a show that she noted, “has stuck in my mind for the feat of representing three different takes on the 2023 massacre of 18 people, including the shooter, in Lewiston, Maine, which happened three months after I'd moved to southern Maine.” Her story arrived shortly after the shooting of 11 Brown University students, two of whom died, and the killing of an MIT professor, and before the discovery of the shooter, dead by apparent suicide. Art is something that we depend on to help us through the passing of loved ones. Marta Pauer-Tursi visited Burlington City … [Read more...] about Welcome


