Provincetown

Gallery Ehva

Contemporary & Early Provincetown Art

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2010 season schedule

sculpture garden

space

 

Ewa Nogiec, Director

Winter hours:
Fri, Sat, Sun Noon-4pm

 

provincetown
contemporary artists

James Bakker
Rachel Brown
Daniel Cleary
Barbara Cohen
Tamar Cohen
Didier Corallo
Daniel Dejean
Tasha Depp
Donna Dodson
Rob DuToit
Jenny Fragosa
Lorrie Fredette
Wendelin Glatzel
Suzanne Harding
Myrna Harrison
Alicia Henry
Jenny Humphreys
Leslie Gillette Jackson
Jane Kogan
MP Landis
Bill Liebeskind
Virginia Luppino
Jay McDermott
Kevin McDermott
Andy Moerlein
Ewa Nogiec
Fawn Potash
Richard E. Smith
Sterck/Rozo
Lisa Ventre
Michael Walden
Rob Westerberg

Special Collection:
Richard Baker

Sculpture Garden (outside):
Whale Tail: Greg Clemence
Wind: Donald Gerola
"Diana Godess of the Hunt": Jerry Holmes

 

Phil Smith, Show Installations


74 Shank Painter Road
P.O. Box 1426
Provincetown, MA 02657
508-487-0011
508-776-4856 (cell)
www.galleryehva.com
art@galleryehva.com

AMPLE PARKING!

 

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Visit great sites about art & Provincetown:

ProvincetownArtistRegistry.com
iamprovincetown.com

William Harry Warren Bicknell | Joseph Birren | Evelin Bodfish Bourne |
Peter Busa | Frank Carson | Oliver Chaffee | Dorothy Lake Gregory |
Marion Hawthorne | Blanche Lazzell | Joseph Kaplan | Karl Knaths |
Doris Lindo Lewis
| William Littlefield | Dorothy Loeb | Olga Sears |
Marcus Waterman
| Agnes Weinrich | D.C. Wyman

 

Gallery Ehva, Contemporary and Early Provincetown Art

 

D.C. Wyman (Dorothy Churchill Wyman)

Dorothy Churchill Wyman was professionally known as D. C. Wyman (or later D. Wyman Martin). She studied at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School, Massachusetts and then privately with George Elmer Browne. She accompanied Browne on her first trip to Europe and later studied with him in Provincetown during the summer.

Wyman's first solo exhibition was at Grace Horne's Galleries, the trend setting Boston gallery of its time, where she sold six of the landscapes she had done in Spain and France during her outdoor instruction with Browne. Her work first prompted national recognition at the twenty-second annual exhibition of the Allied Artists of America held in New York in 1935. Wyman continued to exhibit extensively throughout her career at the Boston Society of Independent Artists, the Copley Society and the Provincetown Art Association, among others. Some of her most interesting exhibitions, however, were held in her own studio located at 112 Newbury Street in Boston.