MENU

Sections

  • Home
  • About
    • The Chestertown Spy
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising & Underwriting
      • Advertising Terms & Conditions
    • Editors & Writers
    • Dedication & Acknowledgements
    • Code of Ethics
    • Chestertown Spy Terms of Service
    • Technical FAQ
    • Privacy
  • The Arts and Design
  • Local Life and Culture
  • Public Affairs
    • Ecosystem
    • Education
    • Health
  • Community Opinion
  • Donate to the Chestertown Spy
  • Free Subscription
  • Talbot Spy
  • Cambridge Spy

More

  • Support the Spy
  • About Spy Community Media
  • Advertising with the Spy
  • Subscribe
June 4, 2025

Chestertown Spy

Nonpartisan and Education-based News for Chestertown

  • Home
  • About
    • The Chestertown Spy
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising & Underwriting
      • Advertising Terms & Conditions
    • Editors & Writers
    • Dedication & Acknowledgements
    • Code of Ethics
    • Chestertown Spy Terms of Service
    • Technical FAQ
    • Privacy
  • The Arts and Design
  • Local Life and Culture
  • Public Affairs
    • Ecosystem
    • Education
    • Health
  • Community Opinion
  • Donate to the Chestertown Spy
  • Free Subscription
  • Talbot Spy
  • Cambridge Spy
6 Arts Notes

Working Artists Forum Exhibit at The Market at Dover Station on May 2nd

April 30, 2025 by Working Artists Forum (WAF) Leave a Comment

Share

The Working Artists Forum is pleased to invite the public to a member’s exhibit from May 1 through June 30, 2025, at the Gallery at the Market at Dover Station.

The exhibit, titled “All Things Spring”, is in a dedicated gallery space within the Market. Opening reception is First Friday, May 2, from 5-7 p.m.

Enjoy light refreshments and a beautiful selection of studio and plein air works by 24 regional artists. 

Launched in 1979 by a small group of artists, Working Artists Forum – now with over 100 members – is a thriving arts organization with many vital connections within the Eastern Shore’s arts community.  Members exhibit widely, win awards, teach classes and workshops, and actively participate in arts events throughout our region.

The Market at Dover Station is a new and unique shopping, dining and social experience located in a renovated 1912 warehouse at 500 Dover Street in the heart of historic Easton, Maryland.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Trad Jazz Banjo Legend Don Vappie at the Mainstay

April 29, 2025 by The Mainstay Leave a Comment

Share

New Orleans Jazz Legend Don Vappie

On Saturday, May 17 The Mainstay in Rock Hall is thrilled to welcome Creole jazz banjo legend Don Vappie. Vappie is descended from a long line of jazz musicians from the river parishes of New Orleans. He plays with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band (one of the most illustrious bands ever to appear at The Mainstay) and Don Vappie & the Creole Jazz Serenaders, fan favorites of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. His music credits include performances at Lincoln Center with Wynton Marsalis and recordings with Bette Midler, Terrence Blanchard, Diana Krall, Peggy Lee, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Eric Clapton, and many others. His film credits include American Creole: New Orleans Reunion, Zora Neal Hurston: Jump At The , and the television series Treme.

Vappie also teaches jazz guitar at Loyola University in New Orleans and is an expert on the history of Creole music.

In addition, he has received awards for his contributions to the preservation of New Orleans Creole Culture through music and film. He has produced 7 of his own albums, co-produced and starred in a PBS documentary, performed as a featured artist with orchestras on movie and television soundtracks, and at concerts and festivals around the world. It is said that Vappie’s highly regarded unique and original tenor banjo style is equal only to his love of his Creole heritage and tradition.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

New Four-day Immersive Program for Youth Debuts this July

April 29, 2025 by Tred Avon Players Leave a Comment

Share

Tred Avon Players (TAP) and the Oxford Community Center (OCC) are excited to invite youth to participate in Shakespeare Midsummer Stage, an immersive four-day Shakespeare workshop for students entering grades 5–12. This exciting new program runs July 28–31, 2025, from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. each day at the Oxford Community Center, culminating in a free showcase performance for family and friends on Thursday, July 31 at 6:30 p.m.

As part of their shared mission to educate and inspire, TAP and OCC are launching this unique summer experience to offer students a fun, engaging, and educational opportunity to explore the timeless works of William Shakespeare.

Participants will work with veteran actor, director, and school teacher David Cherry to develop their skills in acting, voice, movement, and scene study—building confidence, creativity, and stage presence in a supportive and collaborative environment.

“This is not just about learning Shakespeare,” said Cherry, who leads the program. “It’s about connecting with the language, the characters, and with each other. Students will gain tools that apply both onstage and off—and they’ll have a blast doing it.”

“We’re thrilled to bring this kind of meaningful arts education to young people in our community,” said Liza Ledford, Executive Director of Oxford Community Center, and Melissa Barcomb-Doyle, President of Tred Avon Players, in a joint statement. “This partnership reflects our shared commitment to providing opportunities that spark creativity, nurture talent, and build community through the arts.”

The workshop fee is $200 per student and includes a Shakespeare Midsummer Stage t-shirt. Space is limited. Registration closes May 31, 2025 or until full. To learn more and register, visit https://www.tredavonplayers.org/youth-workshop-2

About Tred Avon Players

Founded in 1982, Tred Avon Players is a nonprofit community theater dedicated to enriching, educating, and entertaining audiences with high-quality productions. For more than four decades, TAP has thrived thanks to the dedication of local performers, stagehands, audience members, and donors. To learn how you can get involved or purchase tickets for upcoming shows, visit www.tredavonplayers.org and follow TAP on Facebook, X and Instagram.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Chesapeake Music’s 40th Anniversary Chamber Music Festival – June 6-14 By James Carder

April 26, 2025 by Chesapeake Music Leave a Comment

Share

The iconic Juilliard String Quartet will headline the second week of the Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival. Photo courtesy of Juilliard String Quartet and Colbert Artists Management.


Reflection and Celebration
 is the theme of this year’s Chamber Music Festival – six concerts performed by world-class musicians at the Ebenezer Theater in historic Easton, Maryland. Back for this celebration and as a reflection of the Festival’s past four decades are musicians long-associated with the Festival – Catherine Cho, current Artistic Director, Robert McDonald, Peggy Pearson, Daniel and Todd Phillips, Tara Helen O’Connor, Carmit Zori, and especially two of its founding members, J. Lawrie Bloom and Artistic Director, Marcy Rosen. These players will perform some of their and the audience’s favorite repertoire, combining forces in partnerships well-established over the years. As always, the Festival will also showcase a distinguished guest string quartet as well as superb younger musicians who are well on their way to becoming outstanding performers on the world’s stages. And, as always, there will be entertaining surprises along the way.

Week Two of the Festival will feature the iconic Juilliard String Quartet – Areta Zhulla, Ronald Copes, Molly Carr, and Astrid Schween. They will perform Bedřich Smetana’s highly autobiographical and moving String Quartet No. 1 in E Minor “From My Life” (June 12). They will also perform Beethoven’s monumental String Quartet No. 13 in B-flat Major, complete with its original last movement, the Grosse Fuge.  Preceding the Beethoven, they play Jörg Widmann’s String Quartet No. 8 “Study on Beethoven III,” where the second movement is a set of variations based on the fourth movement of the Beethoven string quartet (both on June 13).

Newcomers to the Festival are 28-year-old violist Zhanbo Zheng and 28-year-old pianists Albert Cano Smit and Wynona Wang. All three are major first-prize winners in their fields and acclaimed soloists with major orchestras worldwide. All three will join forces with the Festival’s veteran musicians in varied repertoire, including works by Haydn, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Dvořák, and Fauré. Of special note, Smit will partner with Chesapeake Music favorite, cellist Sterling Elliott, playing American composer Amy Beach’s sublime Dreaming for Violoncello & Piano (June 6), and Wang will join flutist Tara Helen O’Connor for Mel Bonis’ beautiful and spirited Sonata in C-sharp Minor for Flute and Piano (June 14). Smit will also perform solo, playing two charming works by Cécile Chaminade: Étude de concert, “Automne” and Pièce humoristique, “Autrefois” (June 7).

The Festival will offer a generous mix of standard repertoire favorites and lesser-known gems. Favorites include Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet in A Major (June 8) and his Piano Quartet No. 2 in E-flat Major, (June 13); Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 5 in A Major (June 7); Brahms’ Piano Trio No. 2 in C Major (June 6); Dvořák’s Piano Quartet No. 2 in E-flat Major (June 7); Mendelssohn’s Piano Trio No. 1 in D Minor (June 8), and his String Quintet No. 1 in A Major (June 12). Among the exciting lesser-known works are Luigi Boccherini’s Quintet in D Minor in an arrangement by oboist Peggy Pearson (June 6); Robert Schumann’s Märchenerzählungen (“Fairy Tales”): Four Pieces for Clarinet, Viola and Piano (June 6); Louise Farrenc’s Trio in E Minor for Flute, Cello and Piano (June 12); Arnold Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (“Transfigured Night”) (June 14), and Gabriel Fauré’s Piano Quartet No. 2 in G Minor (June 14).

For more information on Chesapeake Music’s 40th Chamber Music Festival and to purchase tickets, visit ChesapeakeMusic.org.

 

Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival Schedule

June 6–14, 2025

June 6 – 7:30 p.m.
Opening Extravaganza!

June 7 – 7:30 p.m.
Hope and Drama

June 8 – 5:00 p.m.
Masters at Work

June 12 – 7:30 p.m.
From My Life

June 13 – 7:30 p.m.
Quartets Old and New

June 14 – 7:30 p.m.
Festival Finale

2 Free and Open Rehearsals: June 4 and June 11 at 10:00 a.m.


Based in Easton, Maryland, and celebrating its 40th Anniversary Year, Chesapeake Music is a nonprofit organization that brings renowned musicians to delight, engage, and surprise today’s audiences, and educate, inspire, and develop tomorrow’s. Learn more at ChesapeakeMusic.org.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Bookplate Author Event: Poet Rachel Trousdale

April 26, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

Share

Rachel Trousdale

The Bookplate is continuing their 2025 season of author lectures on May 14th with poet Rachel Trousdale for a 6pm event at The Kitchen & Pub at The Imperial Hotel. She will be discussing her new book; Five-Paragraph Essay on the Body-Mind Problem. Trousdale’s book- an inventive, poignant, and witty collection that speaks to the intricacies of love, both domestic and wild- is the winner of the Cardinal Poetry Prize.

“A rare gift in art is directness: to turn a clear, unsentimental gaze on love and grief in all their variations, with no smokey or mysterioso evasions. Almost as valuable is meaningful surprise, the stunned laughter of recognition even if the subject for marvel is loss. The heartfelt, unpredictable poems of Rachel Trousdale attain that kind of discovery.”

~Robert Pinsky, Judge, 2024 Cardinal Poetry Prize

“You can’t literally make modern poems with a laser, nor comedy with a magnifying glass, but if you could and you got it all just right—accurate, even-tempered, and delighted by life’s bizarre turns—you’d get something like this wise, sharp-witted and generally exceptional debut, by a poet who knows what to do when you fall in love as well as what to do when the world spins fast enough to throw you sideways and you have to hold on, for your kids, to your kids. How is a baby like ‘a brood of termites?’ ‘What have we taught our son?’ ‘Where are our robot sharks?’ What if a yeti visited a mature, equable, family-friendly Auden? If any poem, any life, amounts (as the poet says) to ‘an incomplete experiment,’ this one’s got lovely results, a thesis, an antithesis, and six kinds of love: filial, amorous, amicable, intellectual, maternal, and one that remains as an exercise for the reader. ‘I Swear This Is Not Intended as a Back-Handed Compliment,’ one poem declares, and neither is this self-conscious sentence: you can trust these technically gifted sonnets, prose poems, sestinas, poesie concrète, punchlines and acrobatic sentences to take you anywhere, and then (as the poet also says) to bring us home.”    ~Stephanie Burt, author of We are Mermaids and Don’t Read Poetry

Rachel Trousdale is a professor of English at Framingham State University. Her poems have appeared in The Nation, The Yale Review, Diagram, and other journals, as well as a chapbook, Antiphonal Fugue for Marx Brothers, Elephant, and Slide Trombone. Her scholarly work includes Humor, Empathy, and Community in Twentieth-Century American Poetry and Nabokov, Rushdie, and the Transnational Imagination.

For more event details contact The Bookplate at 410-778-4167 or [email protected]. These events are free and open to the public, but reservations are recommended. The Bookplate will continue their 2025 event series on May 21st. Author Henry Corrigan will be discussing his queer horror novel, Somewhere Quiet, Full of Light. Copies will be available at the shop before and after the event. The Kitchen & Pub at The Imperial is located at 208 High Street in Chestertown, Maryland.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes, Archives

Jazz Legend Allan Harris Comes to Oxford

April 25, 2025 by Oxford Community Center Leave a Comment

Share

The Oxford Community Center is proud to present world-renowned jazz vocalist Allan Harris on Friday, May 2, for a one-night-only performance honoring the legendary Nat King Cole. Part of the acclaimed Jazz Series On Stage at OCC, the concert invites audiences to experience the rich, velvety tones of Cole’s songbook through the singular voice of one of today’s most celebrated interpreters.

Described by The New York Times as a “velvet-voiced baritone with an earthy edge,” Allan Harris has captivated audiences around the globe with his masterful storytelling, elegant phrasing, and genre-defying performances. His tribute to Nat King Cole is more than a concert—it’s a deeply personal homage to an artist who helped define American music and break racial barriers along the way.

“He was for everybody,” said Harris. “He sang for the world, and he delivered the exact songs that the composers wrote. When you heard a Nat King Cole song, you heard every word, every syllable, and it made sense. It was just wonderful.”

Backed by a stellar jazz trio, Harris will perform some of Cole’s most beloved songs, from the buoyant charm of “Rambling Rose” to the silken romance of “Unforgettable,” delivered with the diction, warmth, and storytelling that make Harris a standout on any stage.

“We’re honored to bring Allan Harris to our stage,” said Liza Ledford, Executive Director of the Oxford Community Center. “His connection to this music is palpable, and it will be a night of beauty, nostalgia, and extraordinary talent in an intimate setting.”


Event Details:
Allan Harris: The Music of Nat King Cole
Friday, May 2, 2025 | 7:30 PM
Oxford Community Center | 200 Oxford Rd, Oxford, MD
Tickets and more information: oxfordcc.org

This event is expected to sell out. Advance ticket purchase is strongly recommended.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

MPT premieres Maryland by Air documentary on May 1

April 24, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

Share

 Maryland Public Television will premiere its one-of-a-kind, “shot from the air” documentary, Maryland by Air, on Thursday, May 1, at 8 p.m. on MPT-HD and online at mpt.org/livestream. A preview is available to view at https://bit.ly/4jclshS.

Captured from a helicopter, drones, and the cockpit of a 1940s-era biplane, this breathtaking film’s aerial footage

highlights the natural wonders of the Free State, from its picturesque western hills and bustling metropolitan areas to its scenic shorelines and pastoral farmlands. The one-hour film includes an inspiring original musical score and is narrated by former Baltimore Orioles Hall of Fame infielder Cal Ripken, Jr.

The four seasons are represented along with striking visits to landmarks such as the Antietam National Battlefield, the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, Fort McHenry, and the Maryland State House. Viewers take in a birds’-eye view of historic communities in Annapolis, Baltimore, Cumberland, Southern Maryland, and the Eastern Shore, plus stunning footage of Ocean City, Deep Creek Lake, and the wild ponies of Assateague Island.

Following its May 1 premiere, Maryland by Air will have encore broadcasts on MPT-HD on May 3 at 3:30 p.m. and May 4 at 6:30 p.m.  MPT members with access to MPT Passport will also be able to stream the full program anytime following the May broadcast premiere.

By special arrangement, a 45-minute version of the film will be presented at the Maryland Science Center in Baltimore as an IMAX “resident film” over the next decade.

Maryland by Air complements earlier award-winning MPT aerial productions Chesapeake Bay By Air and Potomac by Air: Our Nation’s River.  The film is produced by John Paulson Productions with MPT’s Steven Schupak, executive vice president and station manager, and Eric Neumann, managing director of On-Air Fundraising & Development Productions, as executive producers.

The film is made possible in part by the MPT Foundation New Initiatives Fund established by Irene and Edward H. Kaplan, University of Maryland Global Campus, the Eric Stewart Group, and Frank Islam and Debbie Driesman.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Chesapeake Histories: A talk with Sultana Education Foundation VP Chris Cerino

April 23, 2025 by James Dissette Leave a Comment

Share

 

In a innovative collaboration aimed at deepening students’ understanding of the Chesapeake region’s rich but often underrepresented history, the Sultana Education Foundation has launched a compelling educational program focused on the African American experience in the region.

The presentation, piloted during Black History Month for local fifth-grade students, pairs digital storytelling with a real-world exploration of historic Chestertown. The results are dramatic: room-sized images slide smoothly across a painted map of the Bay region on the Sultana building floor during a narration of the image’s historical relevance.

“This is something we’ve wanted to do for a long time,” said Vice President of Sultana Education Foundation Chris Cerino. “The story of African Americans in the Chesapeake is deeply intertwined with the story of the region itself—some of the nation’s most influential abolitionists and civil rights leaders came from the Eastern Shore, including Kent County.”

The presentation was created in partnership with the C.V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience with assistance from Deputy Director of the Starr Center Jaelon Moaney, Chesapeake Heartland’s Project Director Darius Johnson, and community historian Airleee Johnson along with contributions from Starr Center Director and historian Adam Goodheart.

“We didn’t just want to tell history—we wanted to tell it right,” Cerino said. “That meant inviting African American community members to help shape and share the narrative.”

Anchored in Sultana’s interactive digital map of the Chesapeake Bay, the slides connect key historical moments to specific geographic locations. From the arrival of enslaved Africans to the era of Jim Crow, and ultimately to the election of Barack Obama, the program aims to acknowledge historical pain, celebrate resilience, and recognize the ongoing journey toward equality.

“The impact of crafting this dynamic experience becomes clearer, and compounds, each time I bear witness to pivotal sparks of discovery in local students and educators alike. Retracing my childhood footsteps, as well as those of the change agents who came before, through innovative tools that usher collective, nuanced strides forward is both grounding and cathartic,” writes Jaelon Moaney, whose family

In a recent exhibit, students were shown landmarks like Jane’s Church, Bethel Church, the Garfield Center (a formerly segregated space), and Sumner Hall—once a meeting place for free African Americans. After the digital component, students toured the streets of Chestertown, learning that many local buildings hold extraordinary stories.

“This isn’t just about the past,” said Cerino. “It’s about seeing how the legacy of struggle and strength shapes where we live today.”

The program also highlights lesser-known but significant elements of African American history in the region—such as the legacy of Black watermen who worked the Bay. “The waterways offered rare opportunities for Black entrepreneurship,” said the presenter. “These were men who owned boats, hired crews, and ran their own businesses at a time when such autonomy was rare for African Americans.”

In addition to this new presentation, Sultana continues to offer a digital map and lecture series on Native American history in the region—another vital narrative often overshadowed in conventional histories.

The Foundation hopes to expand the audience beyond local classrooms. Plans are underway to present the program during community events like Downrigging Weekend and Legacy Day, with groups like Sumner Hall identified as ideal partners for future showings.

“We want the full, honest story of this region told,” said the presenter. “Not just for students, but for everyone.”

The Spy recently spoke with Chris Cerino about the ongoing presentation.

For more about Sultana Education Foundation, go here.

This video is approximately seven minutes in length.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1 Homepage Slider, 6 Arts Notes, Archives

Selkie Books of Rock Hall Calendar of Sales and Events

April 23, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

Share

Selkie is covering 20% off the fine works of our amazing Local Authors and Artists! No Exclusions (except the large metal Sculptures of ROBERT D LASUS, of Fairmount Park fame, displayed in the Secret Garden, but including Bob’s Art Photography). Pick from the Collections of our more than 70 (!) Local Authors and Local Artists, whose creations Selkie offers you every day store commission-free.

Next, Selkie is providing a $50 Gift Certificate Door Prize – free entry for our browsers and shoppers on 4/26 ~ No Expiration, No Exclusions. Why this $50 amount for this Special Day? (If you’ve been noticing, it’s the Door Prize value amount Selkie is offering at all our 2025 Special Events!) Because Selkie and the Captain are celebrating the bookstore’s 5 happy, wonderful years in Rock Hall as of August 2025 ~ Selkie thinks of it as 50 for 5 in 25!

Selkie is launching on 4/26 our Rare Books Buying Bonanza Period that will run thru the Graduation Months of May and June! Selkie is covering 15% off Selkie’s own and our Local Consignors’ simply marvelous Collections of Rare & Collectible Books! The perfect gift that shows you care for your giftees and that you understand the essential importance of not only rare but all Real Books ~ inscribable, annotatable, meaningful keepsakes ~ to the education of our progeny and to the preservation of our civilization. With that thought, Selkie also is giving to the first ten Rare Book purchasers a free copy of Walter M Miller, Jr’s “A Canticle for Leibowitz.”

Join us:

• on Sunday, April 27, for a beautiful presentation, “Painting Provence,” by great Artist and Author PATTY MOWELL about her art studies in France last year ~ and catch excellent WCTR Jeff Ferguson’s ‘Shore Perspectives” radio interview of Patty that morning, 106.9 FM (1530 AM) at 9:00 a.m.!

• on Saturday, May 3, for fun with terrific Horticulturist & Author RUTH ROGERS CLAUSEN, presenting, “How Sweet It Is ~ Fragrance In The Garden” ~ signing her superb Collection, and answering your ‘Chelsea Chop’ and ‘pesky deer in the garden’ questions!

• on Sunday, May 18, for signing “Drew’s Grand Adventures,” by delightful Children’s Author & Artist NATASHA NASH DIXON, whose charming tale of the ‘coyote’ protecting Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse, with stunning photographs by David Sites, benefits this historic, still active, 1875 Maryland Lighthouse!

• on Saturday, June 7, an exciting Mystery Scavenger Hunt and New Book Launch of awesome Authors MAGGIE and KEN SCHECK’s latest Hippolyte ‘Hip’ Maxwell Mystery Fiction, “A Killing at Carnaval,” an entrancing thriller set in the exotic French Caribbean Island of Martinique!

• on Sunday, June 22, a Show & Reception for talented Griot-Visual Storyteller for the People, and Art Photographer DOMINIC TIMOTHY MOULDEN, whose outstanding works have graced Galleries in DC and Baltimore including being short-listed for the BMA’s Interactive Exhibition Gallery!

6202 Rock Hall Road, Rock Hall, MD 21661
(480) 430-4692
[email protected]

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

RiverArts wet paint show and sale April 26

April 21, 2025 by RiverArts Leave a Comment

Share

Wet Paint Show & Sale – Saturday, April 26

The festival’s excitement builds to the Wet Paint Show & Sale on Saturday, April 26, where attendees can view and purchase freshly created, one-of-a-kind artworks. This event provides art collectors and enthusiasts with the exclusive opportunity to acquire original paintings that capture the essence of the Eastern Shore, often completed just hours before.

Quick Draw Competition – Saturday, April 26

A highlight of the festival is the Quick Draw Competition on Saturday, April 26. This fast-paced event challenges artists to complete a painting within a limited timeframe, adding an exciting dynamic to the festival. Participants will have the opportunity to showcase their skills and creativity under time constraints, culminating in an exhibition of the finished pieces.

Esteemed plein air artist Mary Pritchard will serve as the judge for this year’s competition. With a distinguished career and deep connection to the region, Pritchard brings her expertise to evaluate the artworks and award prizes to outstanding pieces. Her involvement adds a layer of prestige to the event, offering participants valuable recognition for their work.

Join Us for a Weekend of Art and Community

Whether you’re a seasoned art collector or seeking a unique weekend experience, Paint the Town 2025 offers an immersive journey into the world of plein air painting. Engage with artists, explore the creative process, and take home a piece of Chestertown’s charm.

For more information and a detailed schedule of events, please visit www.chestertownriverarts.org.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes, Archives

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Copyright © 2025

Affiliated News

  • The Cambridge Spy
  • The Talbot Spy

Sections

  • Arts
  • Culture
  • Ecosystem
  • Education
  • Health
  • Local Life and Culture
  • Spy Senior Nation

Spy Community Media

  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising & Underwriting

Copyright © 2025 · Spy Community Media Child Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in