Feb 
3

Welcome To The Frying Pan Gallery

WELCOME —  

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WELCOME TO THE FRYING PAN

The Frying Pan Gallery is Wellfleet Harbor’s newest venue for local Cape Cod artists, artisans, and craftspersons. Situated in one of the last true Oyster Shacks in this historic area, the Frying Pan provides a totally new outlet for local art, in a totally old wrapper. Currently we are featuring the following artists:


Jul 
1

Grand Opening Party Sat July 3rd 4PM-10PM

NEWS —  

The Frying Pan Gallery Presents…

Our Official Grand Opening Party

Featuring New Works For 2010 by Steve Swain

The Frying Pan Gallery invites you to our official 2010 Opening Party on July 3rd from 4PM to 10PM. This will be a fun event with musical entertainment on our front deck, hors d’ouevres, and of course works from the participating artists at the gallery. Come and enjoy an evening in beautiful Wellfleet Harbor, and check out some great artwork by local painters, sculptors, and craftsmen.

Above are a few photos of some new works by Frying Pan Gallery founder and featured artist Steve Swain. The gallery has also included new works by artists Paul Suggs, Jennifer Morgan, and Kevin Powers. We have also added new artists Mary Jo McConnell who is from Marblehead MA. Mary Jo is a frequent traveller to Bali, and does amazing etchings and paintings of the colorful local marine life. Barbara Hersey is a painter from Barnstable who does large scale oils of sea creatures. We also have glazed tiles by Anne Marie Zehnder Kott. The last new additions are candid on location pictures of local Cape Cod wild life by photographer Peter Duley. Hope to see you in The Frying Pan.

Steve Swain In Cape Cod Life Magazine

NEWS —  

Steve Swain, Barnstable

Shaping maritime wonders with steel
by rob conery

Fish Ball, cold-rolled steel with enamel clear coat, 7' 4"

Step onto Steve Swain’s Centerville property. Walk past the skiff, the sloop, the 47 foot ketch and follow the path back, to the studio in the barn. Rock and roll music fills the air. A home-made barrel stove pumps wood heat. From the rafters hang fly rods, surfboards, old guitars. Bent to his work, Jedi blast shield protection covering his face, Steve Swain is creating.

Swain is a sculptor. From cold rolled steel he creates art in three dimensions. Most of the pieces depict fish, horseshoe crabs, and other sea life. “The horseshoe crabs and, lately, the starfish are probably the best sellers,” says Swain, 46, during a recent break at his studio.

Swain’s metal creations hang in many private collections and in bar and restaurant installations from Wellfleet’s Pearl restaurant, where Swain says he was able to treat the entire building as a combination of art and architecture to the Roo Bar in Plymouth, where he designed the interior and the light fixtures.

Swain says he has crossed entire hemispheres and the equator under sail. As captain and holder of a 100-ton master license, his yacht deliveries have taken him far afield. He is also a fisherman. “It is amusing to catch some strange, toothy, unidentified fish when you are used to seeing a striper come to the surface” says Swain of fishing halfway round the world..

He’s been sculpting and making steel art since the 1980’s, constantly refining his work. He spent some time in Key West–”I loaded up a little skiff on a trailer and hit the road,” says Swain–and had a studio down there for a couple of winters. But every angle of the compass seems to lead him back to the Cape.

Mermaid, cold-rolled steel with enamel clear coat, 36Ó Click Image to enlarge

Last year, Swain opened his own gallery, The Frying Pan in Wellfleet. After a lifetime spent by the sea, the Frying Pan is the perfect venue for his nautical art. Perched on the cusp of Wellfleet Harbor, the structure is unique. “No two framing members are the same,” says Swain of the old oyster shack. An old ship’s mast is a ceiling joist. You can see rough-hewn, ancient cedar logs with the bark still on. Swain did most of the work himself. “One of the best parts of opening the gallery has been drop-in visits from local armchair historians,” says Swain, many of whom have memories of the building dating back to the early twentieth century. Some materials were floated over across the harbor from the remnants of the old whaling settlement on Billingsgate Island.

Sharing the Frying Pan space with Swain are two distinct painters, Wellfleet’s Paul Suggs, Mary-Jo McConnell of Marblehead and Bali, and Jen Morgan of Harwich (See a profile on Morgan, page 50). Swain’s work is diverse, with many variations on the sea theme. He makes fish–bluefish, tarpon and striped bass are favorites–that can be wall-mounted or rafter-hung. He makes bait ball light fixtures, weather vanes, candle holders and horseshoe crabs. A two-foot starfish goes for about a hundred dollars at the gallery.

The artist buys steel in bulk. His tool is a plasma torch, which mixes compressed air with an electric arc to concentrate 25,000 degrees of cutting power down to a fine point. The hissing torch is so point-specific that the steel around the cut cools to the touch quickly, and he can get on to the next step, cold forming the work by hand. Next he’ll buff smooth the edges and finish the piece. Depending on demand, about half of the pieces will be covered in clear enamel, preserving the shiny silver/gray of the steel, or left untreated, the pieces rust into appealing browns. This is particularly effective with the horseshoe crab wall mounts, as the rusted finish mimics the natural coloration of this sea creature that has crawled around Cape shorelines since antiquity. Swain’s pieces are simple, beautiful, and look almost preternaturally designed to hang in weathered contrast on the faded cedar shingle facade of a Cape or Island business or home.

The Frying Pan gallery is open from late May through the Wellfleet Oyster Fest in October. For information, go to www.fryingpangallery.com, or visit the gallery at 250 Commercial Street, Wellfleet. Steve Swain’s work can also be seen at www.swainer.com.

Rob Conery is a freelance writer, avid fisherman, and lover of good art.

Jun 
15

Jennifer Morgan Show June 19th-20th

Show —  

Show June 19th & 20th 10am – 10pm


Reception Sat. June 5th, 6pm – 10pm

Jennifer Morgan is one of the Frying Pan’s featured artists, If you came into the gallery last year you may remember her paintings of the What Theater, the Bass River Train Bridge, and her series of small ‘Block Paintings.’ For this season Jennifer hunkered down in the studio, beat down a case of painters block, and produced a incredible series of new works that feature views and landmarks on The Cape. Subjects include The Beachcomber, The Wellfleet Drive-In, the What Theater, Bridge Views, Commercial St. Wellfleet, and much more.

The show will be on view all day Sat the 19th and Sun the 20th. The official reception is Sat the 19th from 6pm – 10pm. This is a great chance for Cape art lovers to view this fresh new collection of paintings, and to meet Jennifer in person. Hope to see you here.

Jun 
14

A Day @ The Frying Pan

Photos —  

Here are a few photos from the other day at The Frying Pan. Thanks to all of you who have already had a chance to visit us already over the past few weeks. Opening week and Memorial Day Weekend were a big success with incredible Spring weather in the 80s, and a great turnout.

Jun 
2

Paintings by Kilty Gilmour This Weekend

Show —  

Show June 5th & 6th 10am – 10pm


Reception Sat. June 5th, 6pm – 10pm


The Frying Pan Gallery is happy to announce our first show of the season. The paintings will be on display all day Saturday and Sunday, and Sat. there will be a reception where you can meet the artist Kilty Gilmour. Below is a gallery of some of Kilty’s works, and an artists bio.

MEET THE ARTIST

Kilty Binger Gilmour was born in 1935 in New York City. Her work has been acclaimed for its vivid use of color, clear linear definition and bold compositional sense. Her paintings depict portraits, people, animals, architecture and still life. The subjects of her canvases can be found to frequently combine antiquity with the contemporary and the abstract. Regardless of the thematic trend, her paintings provide the viewer with a link to the realm of the imaginary.

Kilty seeks out a variety of eclectic mediums with which to express her sense of the ironic. She creates shadow boxes in miniature from wooden crates, sculpted portraits out of driftwood and kitchen utensils, detailed landscapes on rocks and shells, and appliqué on mirrors. Aside from oils on canvas, she has gone on to create calendars, greeting cards, numerous illustrations and watercolors.

She received her early training as a student at the Putney School under the renowned Spanish artist, Fernando Gerassi, at the Art Students League in New York and, later, with painter and mentor, Lionel Gilbert. Her recent exhibitions in Manhattan include shows at the 92nd Street YM-YWHA, the Century Association, and the Pumpkin Eater Cafe. Her works have also appeared at Noah’s Gallery in Stonington, Connecticut.

Her illustrated children’s book, Mary Guy: A Caribbean Folk Tale, was published by Lothrop, Lee and Sheperd in 1993.

Kilty makes her home in New York City and spends her summers in Wellfleet, Massachusetts.