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The Ten Collective artists invite you to their fifth show on
April 26-27, 2025 | 10am-5pm | Mississippi Valley Textile Museum | Almonte
ALL NEW PAINTINGS
Join us for a celebration of Canadian talent that promises
to be an enlightening and artful experience.
Artists:
Charlie’s paintings often glow and evoke a peaceful yet mysterious silence. He is a true plein air master that understands how nature can be honoured in his work.
Kaija’s passion and love for the North knows no bounds and her paintings are proof of that. Beautiful colour, extraordinary emotion and inspiration is in each painting she creates.
Jennifer explores expressionism with experimentation and improvisation both in her music and artwork, questioning every note and stroke to achieve what she wants to create and share.
Maria is a skilled and extraordinary ceramicist and painter. Maria brings beautiful, compelling fantasies to life in everything she touches.
Kathy is an accomplished and renowned painter in the naturalist style. Kathy's portraits and still life paintings are compelling, captivating and beautiful to behold.
Jill's humour and ability to render pathos in her own unique, satirical style is both perplexing and captivating. Jill is One of a Kind whose work makes you smile, giggle and ponder.
Eileen loves to paint, especially in watercolour and willingly accepts the challenges and pleasures of creating paintings with a colour palette of light and depth.
Lily’s work focuses on personal expression and a need for solace in a time of complex challenges. Her work is uplifting and authentic in its message, evoking a pleasant and desired calm.
Amelia's work always has a bit of a mystery. Her meanderings through the forest often brings upon her and her work a mood of solitude, of questioning and of longing.
Bhat Boy's imagination is realized in his paintings, books and small buildings. He has
a strong bond with fantasy and can conveys it so beautifully with colour and surprising content.
Guest artist Allan Stanley is inspired by his ancestors’ settlement in Lanark County 200 years ago, and renders its landscapes in a unique, impressionist style.