Art in Service of the Perryman Peninsula Project - Lisa Kozel Mangione


Women Mind in Water: Artivist Series Art in Service of the Perryman Peninsula Project - Lisa Kozel Mangione

About Lisa Kozel Mangione

Lisa Kozel Mangione is a mixed media artist who is the definition of artivist. Lisa raises money for charitable causes by either donating her work to the organizations directly or selling her work and donating the proceeds. Lisa is using her art in service of the Perryman Peninsula Project, a rural community in Harford County, Maryland. The land known as Mitchell Farm is under consideration for development as a freight distribution district. The possibility of the land being transformed from rural to industrial has spurred Lisa to action. She is concerned about the harm the development will cause on an area that used to be wetland. Already industrialization impacts local waterways and ultimately Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in the United States. The new proposal will cause additional pressure and sited close to the water. Lisa wants people to know that even an average person can make a difference.

Where Artivism Meets the Chesapeake

“If everybody realizes that they have a small piece of the puzzle, it may be a small piece — but when you put all the pieces together, it becomes something big and good.”

For mixed media artist Lisa Kozel Mangione, art is a way to take action. Lisa raises money for nonprofits by donating her work directly to organizations or selling her artwork and contributing the proceeds to charitable causes.

Her current work supports the Perryman Peninsula Project, a community effort focused on protecting a rural area in Harford County, Maryland. The land known as Mitchell Farm is being considered for development as a freight distribution district, a proposal that has raised concerns about the future of the Perryman Peninsula and the Bush River.

The Perryman Peninsula lies along the Bush River and has deep historic ties to farming. For Lisa, the issue is also personal. She grew up in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, spending time camping and crabbing along its shores. Memories of soft crabbing with her father inspired her to paint a blue crab, and her next piece may feature a bald eagle, a bird often seen along the Bush River.

Although Lisa does not have formal art training, creativity runs through her family. Her grandfather was a lithographer for the U.S. Mint, and her mother was a graphic artist for Sears. Lisa became serious about her professional art practice in 2016, beginning with watercolor and colored pencil before moving into oils. As a realist painter, she carefully researches her subjects before bringing them to life.

Lisa is also a member of the American Society of Marine Artists and the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society. Through her work, she uses artivism to draw attention to the Perryman Peninsula, Chesapeake Bay waterways, and the environmental impacts of industrial development.

At the heart of Lisa’s message is a simple belief: ordinary people can make a meaningful difference. Her art reminds viewers that protecting land, water, and community often starts with one person choosing to use their voice.

Pam Ferris-Olson

Pam Ferris-Olson has a Ph.D. in Leadership and Change from Antioch University and master’s degrees in Biology and Natural Resource Science. She has studied ocean creatures, worked in communications, and now focuses on the relationship between women, water, and communication.

Pam has worked as an educator, writer, photographer, videographer, artist, and podcaster.  Her work has appeared on TV, in newspapers and magazines, and on a host of online sites. .Her non-fiction book, Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories, featured three contemporary women as they struggle to live graceful lives weighed down by generational trauma and systemic racism. Both her dissertation and her book demonstrate that even though our personal journeys differ, they still resonate with us. These stories connect and lift us.

Pam’s work now focuses on the ocean. She is an ecological artist creating quirky images of marine animals and installations aimed at engaging, informing, and stimulating dialog. She is a podcaster and hosts the Women Mind the Water Artivist Series which explores the connection between the work of artivists and their impact in influencing change.

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Traditional Fiber Arts Focus Attention on Marine Health - Dimitra Skandali

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