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Provincetown: The oldest continuous
art colony in America; a vibrant, diverse
and exciting art community that today
is home to over 50 galleries --
we're proud to be one of them.

Gallery Ehva represents exciting roster
of Provincetown and Outer Cape contemporary artists and offers
year-round workshops for beginners
and edvanced students of all ages.
We also work with local art collectors and show Early Provincetown Art and
Modern Art on consignment basis.
Our shows change every two weeks
with openings on every other Friday
evening 6 to 8pm.


Stephen Aiken

Tracey Anderson
James Bakker
Rachel Brown
Daniel Cleary
Barbara Cohen
Didier Corallo
Daniel Dejean
Donna Dodson
Mona Dukess
Rob DuToit
David Ellis
Nathalie Ferrier
Jenny Fragosa
Wendelin Glatzel
Irén Handschuh
Myrna Harrison
Alicia Henry
Jenny Humphreys
Leslie Gillette Jackson
René Lamadrid
Jonggeon Lee
Bill Liebeskind
Susan Lyman
Kevin McDermott
Andy Moerlein
Ewa Nogiec
Janice Redman
Jackie Reeves
Christina Schlesinger
Meg Shields
Richard E. Smith
Kathryn Lee Smith
Lisa Ventre
Michael Walden
Rob Westerberg
Cyndi Wish

Ewa Nogiec, Director
art@galleryehva.com

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Ewa Nogiec, pen and ink drawing

WHAT WE DO WHEN WE
DON'T MAKE ART

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Gallery Ehva
74 Shank Painter Road
Provincetown, MA 02657
508 487-0011
Skype: ewa0011
© 2009-2012 Gallery Ehva
All rights reserved.

HandycapAmple Parking at Gallery Ehva

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Provincetown Artist Registry

Art Is Good

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Irén Handschuh curates "Polylogue"

Gallery Ehva is pleased to announce a special exhibit “POLYLOGUE,“ curated by  sculptor Irén Handschuh who lives and works on the Outer Cape. 

Iren Handschuh, curator of invitational show "Polylogue"

Handschuh has invited 4 friends with whom she has shared an ongoing artistic dialogue over many years to share the exhibition space from July 29th through August 10th.  “Their work and conversations have given me courage, stretched my thinking and encouraged my growth.  I want to share an exhibition space with them because their minds and work should be known in this part of the world.”

Irén Handschuh

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Kathrine Moore

Kathrine Moore of Nantucket is driven toward collage in her artistic work.  She weds materials that have very different characteristics in their original purpose to create a dialogue between opposites, where pretty meets industrial and humble meets refined.”

Kathrine Moore

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Ramona Peters

Ramona Peters grew up on Cape Cod, Massachusetts in the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe. Peters works with clay and other natural materials making ceramic vessels. She uses and teaches the ways of the ancestors with a sense of awareness to collaborate with the elements of fire, water, earth and air. She chose to revive the lost form of Wampanoag pottery which she describes as “bringing a long relative back home.”

Ramona Peters

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Christina Schlesinger

Christina Schlesinger of NYC describes her work as having significantly changed over time.  When she walks around the city, or in nature, her eye delights in light and pattern and color. In the past, she would relay those images of what she saw onto paper and canvas. Now her interest is in color and pattern released from form and she has moved from representation to abstraction: another way of seeing.

Christina Schlesinger

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Loulou Weiss

Loulou Weiss of Paris, France uses the photographic medium as if she were taking notes:  a private diary of life. Image against absence, traces against nothingness:  her subjects of inspiration are close to those of the humanists, treated in black and white.  For Weiss, photographing life emerges from loving life intensely and protecting that which is bound to disappear. It is also an act of resistance.

Loulou Weiss

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