2014 AU C TI O N C ATA LOG 1 In the pages of this catalog you will see outstanding artists and a variety of donors who gave their time, resources, and talent to support the Abbe. We are extremely grateful to them and our volunteers for contributing to this important event for the Abbe Museum. By learning about the Wabanaki Nations through exhibits, programs, and Native-led demonstrations, our visitors are awakened to new perspectives and they leave the Museum with a deeper understanding and appreciation for our differences and similarities as human beings. Your auction participation helps us change lives through learning. THANK YOU! PA D D L E A RT BETULA PADDLE Zoë Reifsnyder Ash paddle, paper, and birchbark Inspired by the myth of Daphne, Betula is a Daphne of the birches instead. Zoë is a graduate of Maine College of Art and a guest services associate at the Abbe Museum. Zeeteeart.wordpress.com ATLANTIC PUFFIN PADDLE Scott Hatcher D-DAD IMAGES Ash paddle, watercolor LOT #2 Scott Hatcher is a career biology teacher who recently started doing pen, ink, and watercolor renderings that use Zentangle designs and biological subjects. Value: $150 LOT #1 Value: $200 NEVERMORE PADDLE Walter Dunton Ash paddle, acrylic LOT #3 Walter is a native of Mount Desert Island. Having lived here most of his life, he is inspired by the beauty of the island and the rugged coast of Maine. Watercolors are his medium of choice, and he has found that it brings him a great deal of joy and peace. LOT #4 ANCESTRY MOOSE IN JORDAN POND PADDLE Brenda Merritt Ash paddle, acrylic, glass beads, red deer hide Value: $150 “A poem on the back describes how my ancestors survived around the islands. The moose is symbolic of respect.” Value: $350 2 LOT #5 DR AGONFLY ON THE WATER LILIES PADDLE Katherine Noble Churchill Ash paddle, acrylic Katie Churchill was inspired to paint this paddle after reading that the Penobscot Indians believe that the dragonfly signifies loved ones who have passed away. For reference, she used photographs of a beautiful dragonfly that her son found here on MDI a few years ago, and photographs of water lilies on Little Long Pond. Facebook.com/KatherineNobleChurchillPainting Value: $250 FLY-FISHING ONLY PADDLE Patti Selig Ash paddle, acrylic, feather fly LOT #6 Philip Barter was born in Boothbay Harbor, Maine in 1939 and has always had an interest in art. He studied with Spanish abstract expressionist Alfonso Sosa in California in the 60s, and also with Fritz Rockwell after returning to Maine. He was influenced by their use of bold form and color. Phil started exhibiting in the late 60s, and has shown in major museums and collections world-wide. bartergallery.com Value: $500 LOT #7 Patti Selig is the owner of the Cranberry Hill Inn in Southwest Harbor, Maine. She has worked in higher education as a faculty member and administrator for the past thirty years both in Maryland and Maine. Patti and her husband Jerry are currently enjoying retirement on MDI. She has been a volunteer with the Abbe for eight years and is the chair of the Culinary Arts Committee. Patti uses a variety of media for her art, including acrylics, oils, and ceramics; her artwork has been inspired by her husband's love of fishing in Maine. Her paddle combines acrylics on wood with a real fly tempting the salmon. Value: $150 PAINTED PADDLE Philip Barter Ash paddle, acrylic LOT #8 IROQUOIS PADDLE David Webb Ash paddle, imitation wampum, deer hide, and sinew Rahahe'ti David Webb is Meherrin Indian and has always been involved in his Iroquois heritage. Throughout his entire life, he has embraced his culture, sharing traditional stories, songs and dances. He served as the Meherrin Tribe Powwow co-chair in 2012 and he has worked diligently to learn and teach the Tuscarora language. David began creating traditional crafts including beadwork and woodcarving as a child. "Working in traditional Iroquois art connects me with my ancestors in a genuine and tangible way. My ancestors influence my work and what ultimately emerges is shaped by them." iroquoiscrafts.webs.com Value: $300 3 F I N E A RT & C R A F T S BEACHCOMBER SERIES Jennifer Steen Booher Photographs on canvas LOT #9 Jennifer Steen Booher received her B.A. in Art History and Asian Studies at Vassar College in 1989. After a brief period at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, she worked as an antiquarian book dealer in San Francisco, and then earned her M.L.A. in Landscape Architecture and Historic Preservation at the University of Virginia in 1997. She has practiced landscape architecture on Mount Desert Island since 1998. Ms. Booher is particularly interested in the intersection of science and art, whether at the scale of an engineered landscape or at that of a carefully composed still life photograph. This piece depicts found objects gathered on the shores of Mount Desert Island. LOT #10 SPIR AL GR ANITE SCULPTURE Obadiah Bourne Buell Grey granite from Sullivan, ME on basalt base Obadiah Bourne Buell is a self-taught craftsman working primarily with stone. A member of the Maine Stoneworker's Guild, Obadiah's work is also sold at craft fairs and galleries throughout the Northeast. Since the summer of 2003, he has been the sole proprietor of Stone Designs Inc. and the Granite Garden Gallery, an outdoor sculpture garden at his home in Sullivan, which is open to the public. When he's not working on stone, Obadiah can be found in the vegetable garden or on his mountain bike. Stonedesignsmaine.com Value: $350 jenniferbooher.com Value: $280 LOT #12 ALMOST SPRING! ICE IS MOVING OUT! Annette Carvajal Silk, dye, and paint collage 4 LOT #11 GRIZZLY IS KING! SHIELD Kathy Pollard Donated by Jean Rohrer Sweetgrass, thread, beads When the winter ice of 2014 started moving out of the lakes and ponds on MDI, there was a shift in the light as well...Spring was finally on the way! Kathy Pollard, a self-taught basketmaker of mixed European and Native American (Cherokee) ancestry, spent her early years in Southern Maryland and Southeastern Massachusetts. Her father's early teachings and family experiences shaped her love of and appreciation for nature's beauty and bounty. Value: $300 Value: $300 LOT #13 PURPLE TIE-DYED NATIVE HAND DRUM Robert Muise Cedar, elk hide, and dye Robert Muise is a Micmac artisan from Presque Isle. "Even though I didn't grow up with my culture, the spirit of the drum has always been with me. I started making drums in 2009. Since then, I have strived for the highest quality and satisfaction in each one I make. The Northern Flicker, a woodpecker, is one of my totems. It is always there with me, in subtle ways guiding me." LUPINE SUNRISE Walter Dunton Watercolor, 2006 LOT #14 Walter is a native of Mount Desert Island. Having lived here most of his life, he is inspired by the beauty of the island and the rugged coast of Maine. Watercolors are his medium of choice, and he has found that it brings him a great deal of joy and peace. Value: $525 Drums-of-the-flicker.com Value: $195 LOT #16 LOON Sangani Osuitok Donated by Home & Away Gallery Serpentine POLAR BEAR NAPPING – CHURCHILL , CANADA Ralph Fahringer Fahringer's Framing Digital photo and giclee paint Fahringersframinggallery.com Value: $500 LOT #15 This lovely loon is carved from apple green serpentine with white highlights. Sangani, Inuit, was born in Cape Dorset and has lived there all his life. He was raised in a family of Cape Dorset artists. His father and brother are well-known carvers, as was his mother, the late Nipisha Osuitok. Sangani began carving around 1967. He has said that he enjoys carving, and although he is self-taught, he has also learned a lot by watching his father. homeandawaygallery.com Value: $280 5 LOT #18 WOODBLOCK PRINT Elaine Hudson Hamilton Donated by Ellie & Michael Pancoe Ink print ASH PACK BASKET Gabriel Frey Black ash LOT #17 Gabriel Frey is a twelfth-generation Passamaquoddy basket maker. His craft was handed down to him by his grandfather. Throughout fifteen years of making brown ash baskets, he says, "I have done my best to carry on the quality and style that my grandfather taught me as well as to incorporate my individual aesthetic and form." His work is featured in the Abbe Museum's exhibit, Twisted Path III: Questions of Balance. Hamilton elevates the labor of every day life into art in this series depicting the various facets of the craft of stonework. These prints are the most recent series by the artist, who has exhibited her work from Maine to California and in between. She is represented in numerous public and private collections and has received numerous awards and grants. She has lived in California and Maine and served in the Peace Corps in Kenya before returning to make her home in Des Moines, Iowa. Value: $300 Value: $450 EAGLE LAKE Augusto Rosa Photography Digital print LOT #19 Augusto Rosa is an architect and photographer who splits his time between Maine and Brazil. Value: $250 PESKOTOM AND MUS David Moses Bridges Winter birchbark on panel David Moses Bridges, Passamaquoddy from Sipayik, is an award winning birchbark artist that has received national recognition for his work. From full-size birchbark canoes to small etched containers, David is a master of his craft and creates both traditional and contemporary pieces. Value: $500 6 LOT #20 LOT #21 POLAR BEAR Isaac Sala Donated by Home & Away Gallery Argillite This charming sitting bear is carved from beautiful green argillite. Isaac's parents, Markossi and Rhoda, are both carvers. He has been carving since he was eight years old. His subjects include animals, hunters and kayaks. He resides in Sanikiluaq, a small Inuit hamlet located on the north coast of Flaherty Island in Hudson Bay, in the Qikiqtaaluk Region of Nunavut, Canada. JOSEPHA Philip S. Steel The Salty Dog Gallery LOT #22 The inspiration for this piece was a young Zuni woman, Og Wa Pi, a Pueblo Indian from Santa Fe. This donation is made in memory of Christina "Tina" Baker, our friend, and a person who was passionate about the work of the Abbe Museum. philipssteel.com Value: $5,000 homeandawaygallery.com Value: $215 SOMES SOUND FROM PARKMAN MOUNTAIN Sidney Salvatore Watercolor LOT #23 This original watercolor was painted from the top of Parkman Mountain. The view looks west at Somes Sound and Hall Quarry. Sid Salvatore, a Maine native, has lived and worked on Mount Desert Island for the past 40 years. She paints landscapes on MDI and surrounding islands. Value: $200 LOT #24 TRI-STAR Lenny Novak Antler, wood base, feather, and sinew "I was raised in New England and informed of my Native roots by both my Abenaki and Algonquian grandmothers. I have felt a strong connection to nature my entire life and this has helped form my identity as a Native person. As I began weaving dream catchers, I developed a technique which created an original, intricate, and delicate web, which has become my trademark. Incorporating lessons learned from my elders inspires me to seek materials that are renewable." Value: $350 7 LOT #26 STAINLESS STEEL YELLOWFIN TUNA Ryan McDonald Steel LOT #25 TR ADITIONAL CLAY POT Natasha Smoke Santiago Laguna clay Natasha Smoke Santiago is a turtle clan woman of the Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse). Natasha is heavily influenced by her Haudenosaunee heritage, history, and teachings. She also draws upon the experiences of her life as inspiration for her works. Much of her art tells a tale, or has a story behind it, thus she calls her website, "The Storyteller's House." Natasha currently resides within the Mohawk Nation territory of Akwesasne, along with her husband and three children. Originally from Hebron, Maine, Ryan worked in Northern California and was introduced to the world of metal. After almost a year of working there and developing a passion for metalwork, he returned home to Maine where he enrolled in the welding program at Southern Maine Community College, graduating in May 2014 with an Associates degree in Integrated Manufacturing. He is relatively new to the world of artistic metalwork, and the fish is one of his newest designs and experiments. Ryan has a passion to build anything and everything out of metal. He currently lives and works in Bar Harbor. Value: $1,000 This pot is Laguna clay, kiln fired, then it is wood smoked using various wood such as pine or cedar shavings. It is hand built using pinched coils of clay. After the smoking the pot is washed, not only to wash away any soot residue, but to give the clay "one last drink." storytellershouse.com Value: $75 LOT #27 AUCTION INFORMATION ALL ART WORKS WERE DONATED BY THE ARTISTS TO BENEFIT THE ABBE MUSEUM. ALL ITEMS SOLD ARE IN “AS IS” CONDITION. NONE OF THE ITEMS HAVE BEEN PART OF THE MUSEUM’S COLLECTIONS. IN THE EVENT OF A DISPUTE BETWEEN BIDDERS, THE AUCTIONEER’S DECISION SHALL BE FINAL. SUCCESSFUL BIDDERS MAY PAY WITH CASH, PERSONAL CHECK, OR VISA/MASTER CARD. ALL PURCHASES MUST BE PAID FOR AND PICKED UP THE NIGHT OF THE AUCTION. 8 MOONRISE VASE Susan Dickson-Smith Proper clay Hand-thrown, carved stoneware "After the piece is thrown on the potter's wheel, I burnish the surface with a beach stone, then carve the images using woodcarving tools. Natural materials – wood, shells, and coral – add texture. The piece is fired, colorant stains are applied, and it is fired again." Value: $325 W E A R A B L E A RT, J E W EL RY, & G I F T S F O R T H E H O M E LOT #28 LARIAT NECKLACE Amy Leiner Donated by Sagegrass Gallery NECKLACE Jason K. Brown Turquoise, crystal, bone, copper Amy Leiner is the founder of Amy Leiner Designs, LLC. Her signature jewelry line is comprised of and most noted for her chic use of color (in her words, “color stories”), and innovative design trends. Though each piece is a limited edition, the ever-changing styles and sizes created define Amy's intrepid sense of versatility and range. Jason Brown, Penobscot, has developed his childhood passion of making jewelry into a full-blown passion for jewelry design. While attending the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, NM, he learned the basics of metalsmithing and jewelry-making. His path led him to a career in marketing, working with fine jewelry companies to promote and sell high end and designer items. His experience in the fine jewelry industry has blended with his passion to handcreate his own line of jewelry and from this, JBrown Designs was created. sagegrassgallery.com LOT #29 Value: $310 Facebook.com/pages/Jbrown-Designs SEAGLASS BR ACELET Lisa Hall Seaglass, sterling silver Value: $100 This earth-colored seaglass bracelet is made from all-natural seaglass from local beaches set in sterling silver. Lisa Hall received her Bachelor of Arts from Sarah Lawrence College, with concentrations in art history, advanced painting, and sculpture. She studied traditional jewelry-making in Florence, Italy where she began to design and produce custom jewelry in 1989. After moving full time to MDI, Lisa began to incorporate natural seaglass found on the rocky Maine beaches into her jewelry. Lisa Hall Studio is located in the village of Northeast Harbor. lisahalljewelry.com LOT #30 LOOMED BR ACELET AND EARRINGS Martha Newell Glass beads, leather, metal Martha Newell is a Passamaquoddy/ Penobscot beadworker. Facebook.com/w.a.beadwork Value: $60 LOT #31 Value: $450 GATHERING GAL A AUCTIONEER , DENNIS DAMON We are delighted to have Senator Dennis S. Damon lead the auction festivities. Senator Damon is a former Abbe trustee and we’re delighted to have him join us again for this important benefit. Hailing from MDI, Damon holds a BS in education from the University of Maine at Orono and presently resides in Trenton, Maine. Senator Damon was elected to public office in November of 1992, as a Hancock County Commissioner. He was elected to the Maine Senate in 2002 and served four terms until 2010 when term limits required him to leave. 9 LOT #32 SET OF EIGHT SALAD PLATES WITH HERONS Charlie and Susan Grosjean Hog Bay Pottery Stoneware Charlie Grosjean's pottery is functional, comfortable, and meant to be used, with shapes and glazes that have evolved slowly over the years. Each kiln load is a mix of tried-and-true pots and others that point in new directions. His creations are lead-free and safe for baking and the dishwasher. hogbay.com Value: $208 SMALL TULIP POT Lunaform Pigmented concrete LOT #33 Lunaform specializes in garden planters and urns in a style that is modern yet still reminiscent of the styles found in classic American gardens, and the gardens of ancient Greece and Rome. The studio was founded by Phid Lawless and Dan Farrenkopf in 1992. Lawless graduated first in his class from the School of Design at North Carolina State University. Farrenkopf graduated from the College of the Atlantic with a Bachelor of Arts in Human Ecology. Their work has been published in House and Garden, Martha Stewart Living, Elle Décor, and The New York Times. Value: $220 LOT #34 ENOKI PEARL NECKLACE Margaret Kelley Simply Pearls Handknotted pearls, magnetic clasp 10 LOT #35 Margaret (Maggie) Kelley has long been active in Maine’s cultural affairs community and is a member of the Abbe Board of Trustees. She has received a succession of gubernatorial appointments to the Maine State Museum Commission and, since 2005, has served as Chair of the Commission. Maggie and her husband, Jack Kelley, are residents of East Winthrop and Southwest Harbor. PEARL AND SAPPHIRE EARRINGS Julie Havener Designs Pearl, sapphire, sterling silver Value: $700 Value: $225 Julie is both a metalsmith and a midwife on Mount Desert Island. Her jewelry is available at Lisa Hall Studio. etsy.com/shop/wildes DAMASCUS CUFF Jeff Toman Damascus steel LOT #37 Rose Saidemberg has lived in Bar Harbor for the last few years. She worked as a math and computer sciences school teacher for several years, also gradually gaining experience coordinating fashion activities in Brazil. More recently she has dedicated herself to weaving shawls with yarns and ribbons from different parts of the world. "My first welding and fabrication experience began 35 years ago as a kid in New Jersey. Hot metal has continued to be a part of my life both professionally and in recreation wherever I am, from being a mechanic at South Pole Station, to building the home I share with my wife on Mount Desert Island. In 2002, I took my first blacksmithing class at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts to approach moving metal in different ways. I have continued to work as a student and as an assistant at other Haystack blacksmithing workshops and for the Maine Crafts Association. I enjoy combining this range of experiences to create functional or sculptural pieces that can take hard metal and make it appear soft, graceful, and pleasing to the eye." Value: $300 Value: $250 LOT #36 SILK AND COTTON SCARF Rose Saidemberg Silk and cotton fibers LOT #38 VERMEIL EARRINGS Monica Davis Sterling silver coated in 14K gold with lapis beads Monica's work is available at Lisa Hall Studio and Salt. Value: $200 LOT #39 SHARK TOOTH EARRINGS Lisa Hall Shark teeth cast in silver from fossil with natural seaglass lisahalljewelry.com Value: $225 11 LOT #41 LOT #40 MAN'S HANDKNIT SWEATER (SIZE L) Sandy Wilcox Wool and silk fibers Sandy Wilcox, Abbe Board Chair, moved to Maine in 2006 following her retirement from the College of Education at Michigan State University. A return to knitting after a hiatus of two decades satisfies her need to create with her hands. BEADED SHAWL Lucy Tracy Beaded silk, Merino wool Lucy Tracy is a well-known artist who resides on Mount Desert Island. Her designs reflect the beauty she finds around her as well as her love for nature and all things hand-made. Her soft wool and silk scarves and shawls are a pleasure to the eye and the touch. Value: $450 Value: $400 LOT #43 LOT #42 TOUCH OF SUMMER Derrick Sekulich Handblown glass Derrick is a glass artist with Atlantic Art Glass and has been creating glasswork for a little over two years. Originally from the Denver, Colorado area, Derrick moved to Mount Desert Island 16 years ago. A finish carpenter, Derrick also incorporates his woodworking and other talents in his artistic work. derricksekulich.com Value: $95 12 COPPER NECKLACE WITH JADE BEADS Barbara Fleming Silverdust Is… Copper wide, jade beads, copper sheet, lacquer The beads are wired with pure 18g copper; the bear and beads are jade and the body of neckpiece is an 18g copper sheet cut that was folded, hammered, drilled, filed, and lacquered for permanent color finish. barbaraflemingjewelry.com Value: $225 LOT #45 LOT #44 LOOKING OUT, LOOKING IN Patience Blythe Sterling silver, antique carnelian beads “Looking Out, Looking In” is a necklace fabricated with hammered textures, embossed with Osnea (Old Man's Beard), and pierced. The piece is meant to convey the feelings one has when sitting at a window looking outside into nature on a quiet day. The carnelian is an antique strand of carnelian beads, handcarved in China in the mid 1960s. 2001 AMERICAN BUFFALO COMMEMOR ATIVE SILVER DOLLARS, SET OF TWO Donated by Jean Rohrer Issued on June 7, 2001 by the U.S. Mint, the entire run of the Buffalo Commemorative Dollar was sold out in just two weeks. This is your chance to own a set of these iconic coins. The obverse depicts a combination of three different Indian chiefs who posed for James Earle Fraser in the early 1900s. The buffalo design on the reverse is Black Diamond, a 1,550-pound bison that lived in New York's Central Park Zoo in the early 1900s. Value: $400 meliorametals.com Value: $275 LOT #47 LOT #46 WHITE BABY MOCCASINS Dawna Meader-York Deer skin, rabbit fur, beads Dawna Meader-York is Passamaquoddy from Princeton, Maine. Theses moccasins are made of a buttery-soft, brain-tanned, white deer skin. Rabbit fur trims the laces. They tie in the back by criss-crossing the laces in the front. Glass seed beads are beaded directly onto the leather in a feather pattern. They are hand cut, punched and stitched by hand in the traditional way - the stitching ends exactly where it began, completing the circle, just as everything in life is a circle. Value: $100 DESERT DREAMS Leslie Jones Jewelry Sandstone, Lucite, metal and crystal beads "A self-taught beader, I have been beading in some form for over 35 years. Transforming cabochons into unique works of wearable sculpture has become my latest endeavor. Most of my work is a fusion of past and present materials as well as more modern pieces using semi-precious stones and glass seed beads. Jewelry should be fun to wear as well as an adornment for the body." lesliejonesjewelry.com Value: $150 13 LOT #49 WINDWALKER PEARL AND TURQUOISE NECKLACE Margaret Kelley Simply Pearls Hand knotted pearls, turquoise, sterling clasp Margaret (Maggie) Kelley has long been active in Maine's cultural affairs community and is a member of the Abbe Board of Trustees. She has received a succession of gubernatorial appointments to the Maine State Museum Commission and, since 2005, has served as Chair of the Commission. Maggie has also been Chair of both the "Friends of the Blaine House" and the "Friends of the State Museum," the non-profit support organizations for these two highly-respected state institutions. Maggie and her husband, Jack Kelley, are residents of East Winthrop and Southwest Harbor. LOT #50 AQUINNAH SUNRISE WAMPUM SET Elizabeth James-Perry Wampum, milkweed, fiber-dyed with natural minerals, sterling silver Traditional hand-sculpted wampum pendant strung on wild-harvested, hand-spun milkweed fiber dyed with natural minerals by Aquinnah Wampanoag artist Elizabeth James-Perry. Handsculpted wampum quahog shell earrings on sterling hooks. elizabethjamesperry.com Value: $245 Value: $500 PENDANT WITH CANOE AND PADDLE CHARMS Shane Perley-Dutcher Silver Shane Perley-Dutcher is Wolastoq from the Tobique Maliseet First Nation and as a child was given the spirit name “Aduksis.” Aduksis translated from the Maliseet language means little deer. Shane’s passion for creativity has inspired his journey as an artist. “Creativity has been my heart beat since I was a child. Over the years, the beat has found many rhythms. Creative energy is transferable and keeps me balanced, without it life changes for me.” In 2000, Shane graduated with honors and distinction from the jewelry manufacturing/ metal arts program at the New Brunswick College of Craft and Design. In 2006 he formed Aduksis Jewelry Designs as a product of his creativity. LOT #51 Shane’s work can be seen in Twisted Path III: Questions of Balance at the Abbe Museum. Value: $175 14 E X PER I EN C E S LOT #52 EXPERIENCE THE ART OF GLASS BLOWING Linda and Ken Perrin Atlantic Art Glass LOT #53 Experience the art of glass blowing and schedule a four hour session in the hot shop with local glass artists Ken and Linda Perrin. There you and your friends (up to six people) will be able to choose from a number of hot glass projects. Each person will make the project with the safe and thorough instruction and assistance of the Perrins. This opportunity is a great way to express yourself, learn something new, and create memories of a lifetime. WILD ACADIA FUN PARK Four Day Passes to Aerial Adventure Park and Zip Lines New in 2012, the Aerial Adventure Park at Wild Acadia Fun is the first of its kind within 100 miles. The course offers 30 exciting challenges, two zip lines, and a giant swing, all located up to 45 feet in the air. The Aerial Adventure Park is the perfect way to experience a safe and thrilling adventure for adults and children four years and older. Come and experience the Aerial Adventure Park with your friends and families. atlanticartglass.com wildacadia.com Must be redeemed by June 2015. Not available July 4-August 31, 2014. Value: $156 Value: $380 LOT #55 LOT #54 TAIWANESE TEA TASTING AT TEA HOUSE 278 Donated by Lynn and John Benson LOBSTERS AT PRETTY MARSH FOR EIGHT With Cookie and Bill Horner, Sandy Wilcox and Jack Russell Join Lynn and John at their tea bar where a tea expert will guide your party of four through a spectrum of some of the highest quality Taiwanese teas available. Each participant will receive a gift to commemorate their tea experience, and afterwards may linger in the tranquil garden. Enjoy a fabulous lobster picnic for eight on Pretty Marsh Harbor, hosted by Sandy Wilcox and Jack Russell, and Bill and Cookie Horner. Watch seals and herons, eagles and ospreys while enjoying a traditional lobster feed on the rocks, or in the cozy log cabin looking out toward Blue Hill Bay and Isle Au Haut. Guests are welcome to bring beverages of their choice. teahouse278.com Value: $250 Value: $125 15 LOT #56 WATERCOLOR LESSONS FOR YOU AND YOUR FRIENDS Donated by Jean E. Forbes Enjoy learning to paint watercolors with three friends in your home. Retired high school art teacher and MDI resident Jean Forbes will teach you two basic methods of watercolor. Composition, color use and mixing, glazes, washes, values, as well as materials (paper, paints, brushes) will be covered. Paints, brushes, and paper will be available for those who are new to the medium. Participants will be encouraged to work from their own photos or the provided photos. The workshop will ideally take place 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. for two days mutually agreed upon in September or October, 2014. Critique will take place the last hour of each class. Prior to the first class participants will be given an optional supply list and techniques for taking quality photos. LOT #57 MDI BIOLOGICAL LABOR ATORY VIP TOUR AND LUNCH Donated by the MDI Biological Laboratory The MDI Biological Laboratory, founded in 1898, is an independent, nonprofit biomedical research institution. Its research is focused on improving human health by studying regeneration and how we repair damage to our tissues and organs; how and why we age; and how our environment affects our health. This visit, for up to six people, includes a tour of their research facilities and lunch with a member of their scientific staff. This is an opportunity to see first-hand how discoveries are transformed into cures, and what we can learn from organisms that regenerate lost appendages and organs naturally. mdibl.org Value $250 Value: $500 LOT #58 BOAT RIDE AND DINNER AT ISLEFORD DOCK Donated by Sail Acadia and Cynthia and Dan Lief Two tickets for a relaxing sunset dinner cruise aboard the lobster boat Elizabeth T (value $70, donated by Sail Acadia) to Little Cranberry Island, where you will enjoy a delicious meal at the renowned Isleford Dock Restaurant ($50 gift certificate, donated by Cynthia and Dan Lief). The sunset dinner cruise departs from Dysart's Marina in Southwest Harbor, WednesdaySunday at 5:00. Reservations required to ensure availability aboard the boat and at the restaurant. Value: $120 16 LOT #59 ONE WEEK AT GEORGES POND FR ANKLIN AT NEEDLE POINT Donated by Chloe and Scott Hatcher Nestled in the woods, but only 40 minutes from MDI, this is a perfect getaway from the hustle and bustle. Four guests can enjoy the peacefulness of Georges Pond while lounging on the deck or kayaking on the pond. Available select dates in 2014 and 2015. Value: $700 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN IN WASHINGTON, D.C. VIP TOUR AND MITSITAM CAFE LUNCH FOR TWO Donated by Carolyn and David Rapkievian LOT #60 Enjoy a VIP Tour for Two highlighting the new exhibition, Nation to Nation: Treaties between the United States and American Indian Nations, opening September 21, 2014 with a senior staff member of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian at a mutually agreed upon date and time. The NMAI is a museum of living culture and cares for one of the world's most expansive collections of Native artifacts, including objects, photographs, archives, and media covering the entire Western Hemisphere, from the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego. The museum on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. offers exhibition galleries and spaces for performances, lectures and symposia, research, and education. The NMAI is also dedicated to acting as a resource for the hemisphere's Native communities and to serving the greater public as an honest and thoughtful conduit to Native cultures - past and present - in all their richness, depth, and diversity. After the tour, enjoy lunch at Mitsitam Cafe, which features Native foods found throughout the Western Hemisphere, including the Northern Woodlands, South America, the Northwest Coast, Meso America, and the Great Plains. Each of the five food stations depict regional lifeways related to cooking techniques, ingredients and flavors found in both traditional and contemporary dishes. Lunch for each person will include: choice of any one entree, two sides and fountain soda or bottled water. Value: $150 Image credit: © 2010 Renée Comet Photography, Inc. ONE WEEK AT BEAVER LODGE AT CR AWFORD LAKE Donated by Susy Flach A 1950s classic-log fishing lodge on a beautiful island-filled lake with sunsets, loons, and eagles out your windows. A sophisticated rustic cabin with three bedrooms, one bathroom, sleeping porch, separate cabin with screened porch, deck, dock, and raft. This camp offers a peaceful kayaking paradise, a magical experience among great pines and lovely waters. Sleeps six to eight people. LOT #61 Value: $2,000 17 GIF T BASKETS LOT #62 COCKTAIL PARTY COLLECTION Leather tray, eight tumblers, six cut glass condiment bowls, wine chiller, bar tools, and cocktail party book. Donated by Nancy Ho, Kimball Shop in Northeast Harbor Value: $600 CHILDREN'S BOOK BAG LOT #63 Treasure Bears soft book Good Night Maine Fishing for Numbers (signed) Moose of Course Grandma Drove the Lobster Boat (signed) Burt Dow, Deep-Water Man The Story of the Sea Glass The Great State of Maine Activity Book Lobsterman Maggie Goes to Maine (signed) Moose on a Mission Bear-ly There One Morning in Maine Ashley Bryan's All Things Bright and Beautiful Also including a t-shirt feautring One Morning in Maine and birches sail tote by Again and Again LOT #64 COFFEE LOVERS BASKET Four handmade stoneware mugs, French press coffeemaker, travel mug, two pounds of Italian espresso beans, biscotti, gift certificates for coffee beans and brewed coffee, hand-made quilted table topper by Barb Dixon. Ash basket by Eldon Hanning. Donors: Gull Rock Pottery, Rooster Brothers, Restaurant Barn, Milagro Coffee in Southwest Harbor, and Linda Dunn Value: $300 18 Donors: Under the Dogwood Tree, Bar Harbor Baby, Patricks by the Sea, The Happy Crab, Eden Rising, The Blueberry Patch, Stone Soup, The Village Emporium, Acadia Shops, Cool as a Moose, Betsey Anderson, A Little Mad, Sherman’s Bookstore, Star Gallery, and Sidney Salvatore Value: $350 FAMILY GAME NIGHT PACK LOT #66 LOT #65 Maj Jongg set, Clue, Yahtzee, Big Boggle, Apples to Apples, Scattergories, Dominoes, Cribbage, and playing cards, plus popcorn. Donated by Downeast Winds Maj Jongg players and Cookie Horner Value: $175 MAINE WINTER READING COLLECTION Autographed books by Peter P. Blanchard III, Ruth Gortner Grierson, Christina Baker Kline, Carl Little, Joan MacCracken, Catherine Schmitt, Linda Robinson, Tina Rosenberg, David Rosenfelt, Les Watling/Jill Fegley/John Moring, Monica Wood, Christina Gillis, John Gillis, and Judith Goldstein. Additional titles by Sarah Orne Jewett, E.B. White, Chris Breiseth, and Kristin Downey. Also including a handknit throw by Sandy Wilcox. Items solicited from authors by Somes Sound Book Club and Jack Russell Value: over $500 LOT #67 Donated by Jeff and Linda Dunn f ast e ak Café This Wa y er Vase, two mugs, coffee, tea, candy, and cookies in a woven basket, imported from Holland. Br DUTCH TREAT BASKET n Di n Value: $100 GATHERING GALA COMMITTEE Katherine Stroud Bucklin Linda K. Dunn Ellen Gilmore Chloe Hatcher Cookie Horner Maggie Kelley Dee Lustusky Barbara McLeod Linda Robinson Rose Saidemberg Sid Salvatore Patti Selig Jane Tawney Sandy Wilcox Diane Zito LOT #68 DINNER AND MOVIES IN BAR HARBOR Dinner for two at five of the island's premier restaurants, plus ten movie tickets. Excludes drinks and gratuities. Donated by Café This Way, Fathom, Havana, Mache Bistro, Mama DiMatteo's, and Reel Pizza Value: $495 19 L I V E AU C T I O N SNOW Y OWL PADDLE Cookie Horner Ash paddle, acrylic A retired, registered nurse, Cookie Horner is also a registered Maine guide and a hospice volunteer. She loves singing, hiking, sailing, fly-fishing, and anything to do with Maine’s north woods. Ever the creative spirit, Cookie also enjoys rug hooking and watercolor painting. This is the seventh paddle she has painted for the Abbe. Value: $400 LOT A BEAR Cynthia Stroud Bronze LOT B As a child growing up on a farm in Pennsylvania, Cynthia Stroud was fascinated by animals, and dreamed of becoming a large animal veterinarian. Later, her interests shifted to fine art. Today Cynthia lives on the coast of Maine where she works in a wide range of media, including bronze, stone, wood, clay, oil, pastel, watercolor, photography, and collage. Trained as a classical sculptor, her work captures the energy of wild animals and flying figures in action and at rest–from the leap and flex of a dolphin in midair and the tumble of bear cubs at play to the lazy poise of a sleeping bobcat. Value: $750 RIPE AND UNRIPE STR AWBERRY BASKETS: MASTER AND APPRENTICE SET Molly Neptune Parker and George Neptune Dyed ash and sweetgrass LOT C Molly Neptune Parker began weaving when she was a young girl, and today shares her knowledge with her many children, grandchildren, and young artists of the Passamaquoddy community. She is also a community leader and serves as President of the Maine Indian Basketmaker's Alliance. Molly's work has been recognized through a variety of awards and honors, including a 2012 NEA National Heritage Fellowship, a Maine Art's Commission Fellowship Award for Traditional Arts, the New England Foundation for the Arts Native Arts Award, and the First Peoples Fund Community Spirit Award. George Neptune began weaving with his grandmother, Molly Neptune Parker, at four years old. At age twenty, George became the youngest person to be given the title of Master Basketmaker by the Maine Indian Basketmakers Alliance, and is passing the weaving tradition on to his sister and his godson, Emma Soctomah and Logan Barnes. 20 Value: $800 ISLAND IMPRESSIONS Karen McFarland Wool This hand-hooked rug, or wall hanging, is made with strips of wool fabric in the traditional method of Maine and the Maritimes. In the collage are many landscapes, flora and fauna, and other objects representative of Mount Desert Island and Acadia National Park. Look closely! Value: $750 LOT D CONNECTION PADDLE Linda Rowell-Kelley Ash paddle, acrylic This paddle was inspired by a painting that Linda created for the MDI Bio Lab using DNA symbols. Painting transports Linda to a quiet world full of growing colors reflecting the internal landscape that invites viewers to step inside and feel the feathered flowers, walk upon a hill to a one room cabin or sit on a shoreline and look at uninhabited islands. There is a healing quality to her work, painted more from instinct rather than replicating a place as it is. A resident of Bar Harbor, Linda developed her vision and passion for art early on; she studied sculpture, painting and graphics at Maine College of Art, formerly Portland School of Art. Facebook.com/pages/Linda-Rowell-Kelley-Art Value: $300 LOT E PENOBSCOT TR ADITIONAL BIRCHBARK MOOSE CALL Butch Phillips Birchbark, sweetgrass, twine Etched on the winter bark of the white birch tree, the designs on this moose call are typically Wabanaki, and some are copied from designs found on old carvings and ceremonial clothing. The designs depict aspects of the natural world that are spiritually significant and important to Native life. The call was etched without a preplanned pattern and is therefore one of a kind. This ancient hunting tool is still used by Penobscot moose hunters today. The etchings include moose head and moose tracks, Penobscot/Wabanaki curve designs, rising sun with wigwam design, floral designs copied from Penobscot chief's ceremonial collar, hawk feathers, fiddleheads, and leaves of trees important to Native life, such as the oak, brown ash, basswood, maple, and white birch. LOT F Value: $1,800 21 SET OF TWO BASKETS Sarah Sockbeson Donated by Sarah Sockbeson and Nicholas Halsdorff Dyed ash, sweetgrass, and deer antler LOT G "Although I am using traditional material and techniques, my style comes from the place I live today, in this modern society. Basketry, to me, is a fine art, and in order for the tradition to survive, it must evolve. It is personally important to me, not just as an artist, but also as a Native American, to create art that will inspire future generations, and keep the tradition of basketry alive." Value: $700 Native Voice is Primary Voice at the Abbe Museum A PA D D L E R A I S E LOT H At the core of the Abbe Museum’s work is a long, respectful relationship with the Wabanaki communities. For decades the Abbe has hired Wabanaki artists and demonstrators who are willing to share their experience and talents with museum audiences. And, the Abbe has represented these artists in our shop for just as long. In addition to the cultural economy this creates, audiences enjoy learning directly from and interacting with Wabanaki educators, who are generous with their time and willing to share their culture with life-long learners and students from all over the globe. To inform projects and strategic initiatives, the Abbe has engaged Native advisory groups for a variety of purposes – from the construction of the downtown facility to exhibit projects like the award-winning Indians and Rusticators. Since 2009, the Abbe team has expanded this relationship further by moving beyond advisory groups to working with Native curators who have guided the development of exhibits, such as Wabanaki Guides and N’tolonopemk. In 2011, we convened our first Native Advisory Council, which meets annually to consider the overall direction of the Abbe and to develop ideas and solutions for Abbe programs, exhibits, and initiatives. We would like to share with you a current project which represents the next level of collaboration for Wabanaki communities and the Abbe Museum. Over the years, many Wabanaki people have talked with Abbe staff about Wabanaki 22 objects that have made their way to museums around the country, and across the world. From baskets to beadwork, woodcarvings to birchbark canoes, tools and artwork, many pieces of Wabanaki material culture have ended up in museums far away from the Wabanaki homeland, where it is difficult for tribal community members to see these pieces of their history and culture. This interest evolved during recent visits to the communities to something more tangible: Can the Abbe bring Wabanaki objects “home” for an exhibit, and for community members to study them more closely? From this question, we have developed an answer with our plans for the 2015 exhibit and educational program series, Coming Home. This past spring, Abbe curatorial staff members worked alongside Wabanaki community curators to identify objects for the exhibit from northeastern museums, including the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Philadelphia and the Boston Children’s Museum. Museum staff facilitated access for Wabanaki community curators to the collection records at relevant museums, while relying on the community curators to identify what should “come home.” As we move into the design phase, Wabanaki community curators will also provide background information on the pieces they selected, and help guide the design of the exhibit to represent their culture and history from their perspective. This approach follows the model established by the National Museum of the American Indian and it is serving the participants well. Creating significant new connections, Coming Home artifacts will be able to represent Wabanaki perspectives on resistance, survival, religion, ecology, art, as well as intricately intertwined world and spiritual views, all mostly invisible in the nation’s museums. The possibilities for cultural engagement are boundless. The project is guaranteed to enhance a growing relationship between the Abbe and the Wabanaki tribes, and present new perspectives to our visitors, the likes of which they have not encountered before. This project is just one excellent example of how Native voice is the primary voice at the Abbe Museum. This is our charge, this is our mission. Your gift during the Gathering Gala paddle raise will support, in fiscal year 2014, the exhibit costs of salaries and contract fees, travel costs for Native advisors, program delivery costs, and additional expenses related to AbbeWabanaki collaborations. During the July 30 Gathering Gala, attendees will have the opportunity to raise their paddle and make a charitable donation in support of these initiatives. Thank you for your generosity and for your enthusiastic support of our mission to inspire new learning about the Wabanaki Nations with every visit. WABANAKI-GUIDED TOUR ON THE PENOBSCOT RIVER Anonymous Donor LOT I Penobscot Nation Tribal Historian James E. Francis, Sr. and Penobscot river guide Jason Pardilla have teamed up to offer an experience for those who want to slow down and breathe in the pine forest, feel the rush of the river, and learn about the history of Henry David Thoreau's journeys, the Penobscot Homeland, and days of logging on the Penobscot River. This three-day two-night adventure for four will come with a menu of activities to choose from. You and your compatriots will be able to talk with the guides to design the kind of trip that will best suit you. Canoe equipment and gear will be provided by the New England Outdoor Center; if needed, canoe instruction will be offered at the start of the trip. Food and accommodations for guests are all included. Value: $3,000 AT SUNSET, THE OWL CAME Original from Thanks to the Animals Rebekah Raye Donated by Artemis Gallery Ink, watercolor, pastel LOT J Thanks to the Animals is a children's book by Passamaquoddy storyteller Allen Sockabasin. It was recognized in the Society of Illustrators 25th Anniversary Show of Original Art in New York City and also holds a top 10 Children's Picked List and Chicakadee award in Maine, plus a Georgia book award. Value: $2,100 CASCADE BASKET Jeremy Frey Black ash, dye, and sweetgrass Jeremy Frey is a Passamaquoddy basketweaver living in Maine, and he descends from a long line of Native weavers. Specializing in fancy ash baskets, a traditional form of Wabanaki weaving, his work has been featured in the Changing Hands exhibit at the Museum of Art and Design in New York City. He has pieces in the Smithsonian, and in many other prominent museums around the country. LOT K In 2011, Jeremy won Best of Show at the Sante Fe Indian Market and at the Heard Indian Market Fair. This is only the second time that someone has won both shows in the same year and it was the first time in the Sante Fe Indian Market's 90+ year history that a basket achieved this highest honor. jeremyfreybaskets.com Value: $8,000 23 SIEUR DE MONTS LEVEL BASKETMAKER LEVEL CANOE LEVEL W I GWA M L E V E L B HA , LLC Certified Public Accountants 24
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