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J. Franklin Wright
Renowned Marine Artist
Alan Syliboy
Mi’kmaq Artist
Pierre Nadeau
Impressionist
Chippie Kennedy
Realist Sculptor
Kate Georgallas
Expressive Realism
Katie Melanson
See All Available Works
Bill Rogers
Watercolor and Oil
Cori MacInnis
Watercolor Artist
Jeanne Bedard
Artist
Noteworthy Artists that aren’t regularly available to our Gallery
See All Available Works
  • Norval Morrisseau
  • J.W. Beatty
  • Frederick Varley
  • Joseph Purcell
  • Al Chaddock
  • Franz Johnston
  • Frederick Arthur Verneer
  • Leonard Brooks
  • Jack L. Gray
  • Alex Janvier
  • Carl Ray
  • Roy Thomas
  • Daphne Odjig

Cori MacInnis

Cori MacInnis is a watercolour artist, creative educator and mother of four. She paints from her home studio near St. Andrews, Antigonish County, surrounded and inspired by family and nature and all the colours they contain.

“I try to find a balance between control and letting go in my paintings; I find beauty in reality but I like to let the paint take the lead sometimes too.

Painting for me is a release, an escape, an outlet and a form of meditation.”

A member of the Canadian Society of Painters in Watercolour (CSPWC), Cori’s subject matter is most often people, animals or birds and her custom portraits hang on the walls of many private collectors.

Down To Earth Art Gallery is proud to have been displaying Cori’s watercolours since 2008.

Heading to Market

00048
$70.00 Cdn
In stock
1
Product Details
Size: 22x14 inches
Medium: Limited Edition of 300 Lithographs

By the 1920’s, the indomitable fishing schooner had reached the apex of its development. Fore-and-rigged, the typical two-masted “Grand Banker” was primarily engaged in the salt-cod fishery. A fast and weatherly “saltbanker”, such as the” Independence”, would go out to the fishing grounds for cod. The fish were split and salted in bulk down the hold, until the schooner was full. The rugged dory fishermen of this period were the most respected men on the North Atlantic. Day after day, year after year, in oppressive fog, blinding snow squalls and savage storms, they toiled for hours at a time, on frigid and unforgiving seas. The two dory fishermen are looking at the seaworthy “Nova Scotiaman”. Independence, as she leaves the banks for market. The schooner may call in at a bait supply port nearer the coast of Nova Scotia to take on fresh bait before returning to the Gulf of St. Lawrence or to the Sable Island Banks to “top of the catch”.

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