June, 2023

Kopf and Tefft artwork

Karen Kopf, “D.C al Fine”
and
Jessica Tefft, “Peaceable Kingdom”

Exhibit Dates: May 28 – July 1, 2023

Gallery Hop: Friday, June 2, 7-9 pm

Art Crush and Artists’ Reception: Friday, June 16, 7-9 pm

Karen Kopf is inspired by jazz, classical, and rock music, merged with the natural world to create a sensory experience rather than a narrative one. Sketching the natural forms in the world, she then composes the painting by overlapping individual forms to create more forms within the whole. The result is a web of conflicting energies with many intricate textures.

“Leaves” and “Coltrane’s Crescent” by Karen Kopf

Gold, silver and copper leafing is used liberally throughout the works. The overall impression of the paintings is a tactile and luminous interpretation of the energy within forms in nature.

After studying painting in Austria for a year, Karen Kopf established a studio in Marbella, Spain on the Costa del Sol.  Five years under the bright Spanish sun added an intensity to the colors of her palette and a wide range of experiences and exhibitions to her career as a professional artist. Her works from this period are in collections all over the world.

Upon returning to the U.S., she painted in upstate New York, where she was resident director of the Guy Park State Historic Site. Eventually she moved to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where she earned a master’s degree from Salem College and worked for twenty years as a teacher while she and her husband raised two sons. She currently exhibits at Artworks Gallery in Winston-Salem.


A framed print of the “Peaceable Kingdom” by Edward Hicks hung in Jessica Tefft’s living room when she was growing up. The lion’s eyes appeared to watch over her. Later, she realized Hicks’ painting was a visual sermon promoting spiritual and earthly harmony. In addition to being a painter, Hicks was a Quaker minister, and his works were based on Isaiah 11:6-9: “The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them.”

“Madonna” and “Peaceable Kingdom” by Jessica Tefft

When Tefft created this new body of work, she thought about how the Peaceable Kingdom would look today in our gun-crazed country. These works express her thinking on how the things we hold most beautiful are also the most targeted.

Jessica Tefft is an artist and professional photographer based in Winston-Salem. She believes art offers her the language to explore themes of trauma and healing. She also sees art as a lens through which to interpret current events. She worked as a photojournalist in Washington, D.C., and elsewhere and has exhibited and won numerous awards for her work. Photojournalism took her from Cuba to the Alaskan wilderness, and then the presidential campaign trail. She assembled and edited an entry for coverage of the D.C. sniper that was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. She graduated from Wake Forest University with a degree in studio art and is currently working toward a master’s in public administration. She is the founder and executive director of The Art SHAC, a creative reuse nonprofit providing affordable art supplies to her community.

This exhibition is free and open to the public.

May, 2023

Adams and Moskowitz Art

Marion Adams, “Out of the Blue”
and
Seth Moskowitz, “Odds and Ends—The Covid Years”

Exhibit Dates: April 30 – May 27, 2023

Gallery Hop: Friday, May 5, 7-9 pm

Artists’ Reception: Sunday, May 7, 2-4 pm

Art Crush: Friday, May 19, 7-9 pm

“Out of the Blue” and “Partly Cloudy” by Marion Adams

Marion Adams looks to the sky for inspiration. Working with pastels as her medium, she captures ethereal effects of the ever-changing scene overhead. Adams’ intention is to capture the sky in its various moods, show the turbulence of clouds before a storm, haze drifting overhead on a moonlit night, and small points of starlight gradually appearing after sunset. The single acrylic painting, “Wonder”, stands alone among the pastels as a representation of her own quest seeking answers and, at times,
the right questions.

“Celestial Sky” and “Haze Lifting” by Marion Adams

Marion Adams is a retired Middle School Science and Math teacher. She has taught art history, painting and drawing on the college level. She holds a master’s degree from Georgia State University. She has been a member of Artworks since 2015.

“Signs of Spring” and “Runnin’ Out of Time” by Seth Moskowitz

When Covid 19 made us prisoners in our own homes, Seth Moskowitz frequently found himself filled with fear and frustration. But despite the dramatic changes in almost every aspect of daily lives, Moskowitz also experienced intense gratitude for a life that remained healthy, happy, hardy and whole.

During “The Covid Years,” Moskowitz produced a constant stream of images that were never quite completed. To celebrate the many splendors of the Spring of 2023, Moskowitz decided to finish and free these images from the messy confines of his head. He hopes the viewer will find connection with some of the places and spaces he passed through during these sometimes seemingly interminable “15 Days to Slow the Spread.”

“What a Tangled Web II” and “Echoes” by Seth Moskowitz

Seth Moskowitz is a Winston-Salem based artist who creates and combines photographic images into artworks that rarely resemble photography or the images that they incorporate. After a challenging career in the corporate world, he began to create visual art in 2004 as an escape from the verbal cacophony of the workaday environment – a way to enter a peaceful, magical place that is literally, beyond words. He has been a member of Artworks Gallery since 2017 and a member of Associated Artists of Winston-Salem since 2005.

This exhibition is free and open to the public.

April 2023 – Akers and Green

Green and Akers work examples.

Wiley Akers, “Post Covid – Post Modern” and Don Green, “New Paintings and Sculpture”

Exhibition Dates: April 2-30, 2023

Gallery Hop: Friday, April 7, 7-9pm

Reception: Friday, April 21, 7-9pm

Wiley Akers’ new work is an exploration of humans in an abstract style. With an empty mind and no preconceived ideas or plans Akers begins with pencil marks on the canvas of a human form, as if the image and artist is having a conversation on how to evolve. After studying the marks, one thing leads to another with paint. Some are quickly done to repress thinking while others are completed over days.

Akers Work

“The Light” and “Smile” by Wiley Akers

Wiley Akers has a BFA in painting and a MEd from UNCG. He has taught art to middle and high school students for 25 years.

Don Green is exhibiting new paintings and sculptures inspired by the natural landscape.  His large-scale paintings reflect the Abstract Expressionist style of art representation. The source of inspiration is primarily nature: the land, rocks, streams, trees, etc. His sculpture is also influenced by the natural world: mountains, sky, trees especially distorted or odd shaped trees with more character.

“Untitled Bronze 1” and “Reynolda Greenway” by Don Green

Don Green received his MFA from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin in 1966, his BFA from Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Illinois in 1964, and an Advertising Art Degree from the American Academy of Art, Chicago, Illinois in 1956.

This exhibition is free and open to the public.

Grit: A Two Person Exhibit of Photography and Collage

Exhibition Dates: February 27 – March 25, 2023

Gallery Hop: Friday, March 3, 7- 9 pm

Reception: Thursday, March 16, 6-8 pm

“Grit” is the name of a new exhibition open during the month of March at Artworks Gallery in downtown Winston-Salem. The show is a combination of the work of two artists under a single theme, focusing on overlooked moments and objects found in urban landscapes. In addition, the gallery will be transformed into a setting that captures the frenetic nature of looking for beauty in unintended places, whether on the ground or in the sky.

In addition to the work itself, certain pieces have QR codes for additional narration by the artists explaining the motivations behind their work. There are also flyers posted throughout the exhibit with music suggestions so you can have a private listening party while you view the art. Bring your earbuds!

Julian Silverman is a photographer from New York City who has recently relocated to Winston-Salem. His work focuses on the unintended beauty and narratives coming though stolen moments in time.

Elliot Strunk is a collage artist who uses discarded items in his work. His compositions highlight items of visual interest often discarded once their original use has been exhausted. A throughline of his work is what we all consume in terms of food, time and information.

“Feathers, Leaves & Trees” A Two Person Exhibit by Alix Hitchcock and Lea Lackey-Zachmann

Exhibition Dates: January 29 – February 25, 2023

Gallery Hop: Friday, February 3, 7- 9 pm

Reception: Sunday, February 12, 2-4 pm

Alix Hitchcock is exhibiting new hand colored and hand pulled dry-point prints. These one of a kind monoprints are based on initial drawings from shadows of trees and foliage.

Hitchcock Work

Working instinctively, Hitchcock considers the art process an unpredictable visual journey that starts with a structural set up but with much left for accidental results and evolving responses. Her work communicates a sense of awe in the presence of Nature, and brings the viewer into each art work’s world of mystery, as well as portraying a type of “emotional abstraction”, as the artist Arthur Dove said of his art.

Hitchcock received her MA in painting from NYU, and her BFA in printmaking and painting from UNC-G. She is a retired Instructor in Drawing at WFU. She was the W-S Artist of the Year in 1998, and is a founding board member of Artworks Gallery. She has exhibited widely in N.C., and in shows in Kentucky, Virginia, South Carolina, New York City, and Wyoming.

A large ink drawing of banana leaves by Lea Lackey-Zachmann is one of four graphite, ink and acrylic works in this exhibition.  Three dimensional paintings and large colored pencil drawings complete her showing.

The similar shapes and forms in trees, leaves and feathers common in our natural environment are subjects in this exhibition.  An appreciation for the complexity and similarities in these natural forms provides an avenue for understanding and appreciating the commonalities with all living beings and the natural world.

Lea Lackey-Zachmann holds an MFA in painting and graduate teaching certification from UNC-G and a BA from Winthrop University.  She is retired from teaching art at High Point University and prior regional colleges.  She has shown her works throughout the southeast and is a founding member of Artworks Gallery.  Gardening is her passion along with her husband, two dogs and their cat, Be.

This exhibition is free and open to the public.

Alix Hitchcock discusses her work
Lea Lackey-Zachmann discusses her work

Q&A with Mona Wu

How would you describe your art?

My work is mostly representative and nature is my main interested subject. Sometimes l venture into abstraction, especially in collage work.

How have you changed as an artist over the years?

I have switched my medium from Chinese painting to printmaking. The techniques are very different but my observation in nature expressed in my various work still remains.

What artists have influenced your work?

Henri Matisse, many Chinese and Japanese classic painters.

Do you have a favorite medium?

Woodcut is my favorite medium.

What does making art mean in your life?

It provides a channel to fulfill my creative urge. Teaching art classes also gives me feedback from students and my sense of being in a community.

Currently on Exhibit

“Transition” A Retrospective Solo Show by Mona Wu

Exhibition Dates: January 4 – 28, 2023

Gallery Hop: Friday, January 6, 7- 9 pm

Gallery Talk: Sunday, January 15, 2 pm

Reception: Sunday, January 22, 2-4 pm

Update! From now until the end of Mona Wu’s show on January 28, all remaining artwork is 50% off the listed prices. This includes both framed and unframed work as well as original printing blocks.

Don’t pass up this unique opportunity to own some of her beautiful work!

(Please note that cards on the racks and work in baskets are not included.)


In this special solo exhibit Mona Wu is showing over 40 framed works and close to 200 unframed prints, made in her nearly 30 years of Printmaking career. All methods in Printmaking are presented: woodcut, linocut, lithograph, etching, and monoprint. On view are also some carved and cancelled wood boards Wu so lovingly and laboriously produced for edition printing.

Because of her large-scale studio-downsizing, these prints, proofs, editions, as well as many of Wu’s old carved wood boards will be for sale at prices in every collector’s budget. This is your opportunity to own and/or gift a beautiful Mona Wu original print.

Viewers who browse through the show may appreciate the artist’s artistic as well as technical progress and stylistic changes over the years. Yet as the underlying thread throughout her work, Wu still retains her Asian heritage and sensibility in all manners of Printmaking.

A native of China, Mona Wu immigrated to US in 1970. She studied Chinese painting and calligraphy in Hong Kong then received her BA in Art History from Salem College in 1996. She also studied Printmaking at WFU as an auditor from 1997-2014. Wu has taught classes and workshops in Chinese art and Printmaking at Salem Community courses, Reynolda House of American Art, and Sawtooth School of Visual Art and has been a member of Artworks Gallery for many years.

This exhibition is free and open to the public.

Q & A with Betti Pettinati Longinotti

How would you describe your art?

I work in drawing, painting, mixed media, and glass-fused glass, and stained glass.

How have you changed as an artist over the years?

When I was younger my work was more figurative. I also liked plein air. My work is still inspired by the natural world, but presently with a current of conceptual meaning and intent.

What artists have influenced your work?

Artists Edward Hopper, Kiki Smith, and Georgia O’Keeffe have been the most influential to me.

Do you have a favorite medium?

Oil painting and glass are my favorite mediums.

What does making art mean in your life?

I have known since my earliest memories that I was an artist. I love creating, I love teaching art, I love looking at art, and I love encouraging others’ creativity. Art is intrinsic to all in my life.

Into the Horizons by Diane Nations

Mostly Mandalas: Imagery from Lea’s Garden by Betti Pettinati Longinotti

Exhibition Dates: October 30th – November 26th, 2022

Gallery Hop: Friday, November 4th, 7-9 pm

Reception for the Artists: Sunday, November 13th, 1:30 – 3:30 pm


Q&A with Kimberly Varnadoe

How would you describe your art?

I work in various mediums, choosing what I feel best suits the emotional connection I want my audience to experience when viewing my work.

How have you changed as an artist over the years?

I have transitioned from being a student to a professor and am now a full-time Artist. I have taught art at the college level for more than 30 years. I have been exposed to various art forms and feel grateful that I’ve had experiences engaging with my students as they learn to express themselves through art. At this point in my life, I am practicing what I’ve preached and engaging with life through an artist’s eyes.

What artists have influenced your work?

There are so many I couldn’t possibly name them all. I am influenced by art and life from many different perspectives. I have always been drawn to the drama and mystery in Caravaggio’s Baroque lighting. More recently, I have engaged with the women artists of the Abstract Expressionist phase of the mid-20th century, especially Joan Mitchell.

Do you have a favorite medium?

I enjoy choosing, using, and experimenting with a variety of mediums. I have been formally trained as a painter, printmaker, and photographer, and I often combine these mediums in my work. I have recently engaged with oil painting, which I have not practiced for decades, although I have taught painting for many years.

What does making art mean in your life?

Making art is ingrained in my soul. I choose to live artful life every day. Art, Life, Love…all merge together.

Anything else you think is important?

“Life is short”, as the saying goes. I believe life is an exciting journey filled with adventures to embrace. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. My philosophy is to live an authentic life and take care of ourselves and others as we can.

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