We are proud to announce the newest artist to join our gallery, award-winning contemporary painter Kathleen Earthrowl. Stop to see a collection of her inspired landscapes, which will hang in the gallery starting February 25th.
Kathleen’s vibrant paintings draw from the landscapes she finds all around her, using color and light to create highly charged works that are born from her deep communion with nature.
“The senses wake up in nature, the essence of my work,” she says. “The air, water, vegetation, movement, light and color inspire me in their natural state. There is always uncertainty and surprise as well as serenity and peace. In my studio, reborn, I become water, memories, air, atmosphere, branches, trees, light, movement, stillness, color.”
Born in Brimfield, Massachusetts, Kathleen finds inspiration in the ponds, woods, and earth of her childhood home, where, even after 30 years living away, she often returns to photograph, paint, and reflect. Today she lives in Texas, where the wild surroundings are visible in her latest pieces.
“I have discovered an area in Kingwood, Texas, where I live, called East End,” she says. “It is a wild, untouched wooded area on Lake Houston, where paths have been laid but the woods left in their natural state. It has inspired me to do a new and continuing series of work entitled East End.”
Kathleen’s journey to painting took a winding path. “I have moved through stages in my adult life, all connected and leading to what I call my core-career: artist/painter,” she says.
In the ‘60s, she began her career teaching music and modern dance. These experiences soon led her to the healing aspects of the arts, and by the early 80s, she was running a successful psychotherapy practice.
After 15 years, she found herself overwhelmed by the work and craving a return to the arts. And so she began to practice the therapy she recommended for so many of her patients. She sat on the floor one day and began to color and draw, flushing out her emotions through art. She enjoyed it so much that she wondered if she could paint. She began to take classes and quickly found that she had discovered a new passion. “I was so taken with the process,” she says. “I didn’t want to stop painting, and I never have.”
Now nearly 20 years later, she is an award-winning painter who continues to explore the healing power of art. Her vibrant paintings make stunning use of color and yet are still soothing. They are often described as healing and calming.
“Painting, for me, is an emotional improvisation closest to choreographing a dance,” she says. “My paintings lead and I follow. My hope is that the viewer continues in the dance of being there.”


















