top of page

In May I was fortunate enough to do an Artist Residency on Sapelo Island, and this is one of the pieces I created after my visit.

Sapelo Island, off the Georgia coast and accessible only by boat, was originally inhabited by Native American groups for centuries before European contact. Enslaved Africans were forcibly brought to Sapelo to work on the rice and indigo plantations. Their descendants, the Gullah-Geechee people, still live on the island as the Hog Hummock community today. The other approx. 97% of the island is owned by the state of Georgia for habitat and wildlife conservation. 

 

Pen & ink on paper, matted and framed
Final size: 14" x 17"  

A Pier on Sapelo Island, May morning - Original Painting

$275.00Price
Quantity
    bottom of page