Artist Showcases Colors, Shapes and Textures of Marine Botanicals - Mary C. Jameson


Women Mind in Water: Artivist Series Artist Showcases Colors, Shapes and Textures of Marine Botanicals - Mary C. Jameson

About Mary Chatowsky Jameson

Mary Chatowsky Jameson, artist/owner of Saltwater Studio in Newport, Rhode Island, is inspired by the ocean. She goes to the shore to collect seaweed and in her studio creates art that showcases the colors, shapes, and textures of marine botanicals.

Seaweed Pressing as Ocean-Inspired Art

Mary says she’s always been an artist but that anyone who knows her knows how the ocean has always inspired her. She grew up in Rhode Island, the Ocean State, and spent lots of time along the shore. When she was young, maybe three or four, she saw an exhibit of scrapbooks from the Victorian era. Basically, in the summertime when people visited the shore, they made scrapbooks that documented the experience in different ways. They wrote poetry, letters to their friends, watercolors. Nature art was in vogue, so there were flower pressings and because they were at the ocean, they pressed seaweed. Once Mary tried making pressings, the process resonated with her. She was excited to experiment with different seaweed species and different papers. She wondered if the pressings could be considered art. She knew it was a craft but could it be considered an art form? She’s transformed it into an art and has continued to experiment and grow the process and stretch herself as an artist.

saltwaterstudionewport.com

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.

Previous
Previous

Drawings Allow Us to Imagine Things We Might Not Otherwise See - Karen Romano Young

Next
Next

Podcaster Invites Conversation about Human Relation and the Ocean - Pam Ferris-Olson