South Coast Artists ~ 2023 Open Studios Tour

Save the dates for the 20th Annual Open Studio Tour this summer!

JULY 15 & 16 and AUGUST 19 & 20, 2023

Once again, SCA will offer New Englanders the chance to visit the studios of some of the best artists living, working and exhibiting in the four beautiful coastal towns of Tiverton, Little Compton, Westport and Dartmouth. This well-publicized self-guided tour invites art lovers to travel along small highways and rural byways of stunning natural beauty. Open StudioTour weekends are free, open to the public, and require no preregistration or advance ticketing for visitors.

SCA features two open studio tour weekends, typically the third weekend in July & August and includes up to 75 exhibiting artists to the four beautiful coastal towns of Tiverton, Little Compton, Westport and Dartmouth. Whether this is your first visit, or you’re a seasoned traveler to the South Coast, you’re sure to be impressed by the amazing quality and incredible range of creative work being produced in these scenic communities.

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Living Color Gallery Show

May of 2019 Show at DeBlois Gallery featured photography by Meredith Brower of Firefly Mandalas & Meredith Brower Photography) & digital art prints by Kadejah Foster. Opening was Saturday, May 4th, 5-7 pm and Gallery Night is Thusday, May 9th, 5-8 pm. Free & open to public, child friendly, all welcome. Regular Gallery hours are Wed-Sun 1-5 pm & Show runs through Saturday, May 26, 2019. In addition to the featured Show, work by Gallery Members will be on display as well as a Jewelry Artist of the Month.

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Herald News Article 2019

TIVERTON – Growing up on a family farm was the spark that led to Meredith Brower becoming a photographer.

And now, she’s sharing her love of nature and her photography skills in a workshop creating and photographing mandalas made from foraged items. “Forage – Focus – Photograph,” an adult eco-art mandala-making class will be held at the Four Corners Arts Center on Jan. 27.

Though not nearly as intricate as the sand mandalas created by Tibetan monks, the mandalas created in Brower’s workshops share the same quality of impermanence. Once the workshop participants have completed their mandalas and photographed them, the foraged materials are given back to nature.

Dried leaves, tangled vines, berries, seed pods, shells, rocks and sea glass are just some of the items that have found their way into Brower’s mandalas. When she has a composition she’s happy with, Brower photographs the mandala and she turns the images into prints, cards, tiles, scarves and other objects that she sells on her Firefly Mandala Etsy shop and locally at the Aquidneck Growers Winter Market in Newport and the Hotpoint Emporium Artist Co-op in Bristol.

A Tiverton-based photographer, Brower started making the mandalas about three years ago and then she began offering the workshops about a year ago at her studio, a barn attached to her family homestead overlooking Nonquit Pond. “I had no intention or understanding of what this was. It’s been a really great experience and a way to connect to people and the community and your internal soul.... Where that sense of peace comes from,” she said.

At the start of the mandala workshops Brower gives everyone a basket and a pair of scissors and they go out into the woods to forage for items. “I try to open their eyes and change their perspective in terms of seeing beauty in the nature. You see this beautiful red leaf, but if you flip it over you see the veins and all of the structure — so to look at things not just because they’re pretty. Look at the flower, look at the underbelly,” she said.

The benefits of the workshops go far beyond the creative aspects giving people a communal environment to get away from their day-to-day lives. “Most people who come to the class say they’re not creative at all, but most are surprised by the results, which ends up giving them a couple hours out of their day to calm their minds and quell their mind from judging their hearts,” she said.

In 2016, Brower launched the Firefly Festival, a day of yoga, meditation, music and food held in Portsmouth. Since then, it’s morphed into a wellness festival that last year included a meditation walk, a mindful photography class, a mental health writing class and a Thai massage/partner yoga class.

She also specializes in dog portraits, which she shoots in her studio. “All these dogs have different personalities,” she said, describing a shoot with a greyhound who turned “GQ model” when she put a bowtie on him.

The house where her studio is located was built in 1820. Her parents, high school sweethearts who lived in Cranston, bought the 36-acre produce farm and farmhouse back in 1962. “My mother used to spend summers in Little Compton and she literally rode by this in a horse-drawn carriage,” said Brower, who now lives there with her mother, Ruth.

“I grew up thinking everybody grew up on a farm. I didn’t realize how lucky I was,” she added.

Standing in the backyard of the house overlooking the pond, Brower recalled how the beautiful natural setting and seeing hot air balloon rising over the horizon was what really started her interest in becoming a photographer.

She went to the Rochester Institute of Technology originally with the intention of studying printing and going into her family’s printing business. But taking photography class that led to a bachelor’s degree in photo illustration changed the course of her life.

For more information, contact Brower at FireflyMandalas@gmail.com.

More info:

“Forage – Focus – Photograph,” an adult eco-art mandala-making class with Meredith Brower will be held at the Four Corners Arts Center, 3852 Main Road, Tiverton, on Sunday, Jan. 27 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Bring your camera, i-pad or phone and learn how to edit your images. Share your designs and appreciate the local winter fauna. Later, you’ll have the option of participating in a group exhibition. The cost is $25 (basket and scissors provided). Dress for January weather. Limited to 20 participants, so registration is required at www.FourCornersArts.org.

Stay tuned for more workshops this spring and summer of 2019

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The Bay Magazine 2018

By Megan Schmit

A little over two years ago, Firefly Mandalas started on Tiverton-native Meredith Brower’s morning walk with her dog. She would gather pretty flowers, leaves, or shells and carefully arrange them on a minimal backdrop as part of a meditative ritual. Now, you can find the mandalas printed on aluminum panels, cards, and, most recently, tile coasters.

“My art is impermanent,” says Brower, who is also an avid gardener, yoga enthusiast, and freelance photographer. “I make it, photograph it, appreciate it for a moment, and then it blows away or dries up, and I move on.”

All of Brower’s mandalas are composed of the “everchanging inventory of flora” she is surrounded by at Arrowhead Farm, her home and workspace. Whether it’s a delicate, spiraled stem or brightly colored flower petal, Brower is fascinated by the colors, structures, and interactions between the materials she forages.

However, Firefly Mandalas is more than just art; it’s a product of Brower’s personal philosophy. “It’s about stopping the argument between the head and the heart,” she explains. Through particular obstacles in her life, Brower has persevered with the help of “changing perspective.” Sometimes she gets stuck on a mandala, and has to step back, turn the table, and find a new view for inspiration – “Just like in life,” she says.

In the future, Brower hopes to expand her prints onto reusable hemp market bags and silk scarves. She also wants to start clinics for kids and adults to make their own mandalas, in addition to the photography classes she’ll be teaching at the Dartmouth Cultural Center.

Brower urges others to “investigate the experience” and empty their dusty containers full of shells or stones they’ve collected, dump them on the coffee table, and get lost in the tactile, fleeting nature of mandala-making.

Find Firefly Mandalas at the Hotpoint Emporium in Bristol, RI and other select stores in and around RI.

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Meredith Brower