One Found a Home
Letter 20  ·  Spring 2026

One Found a Home

April 13, 2026

One Found a Home

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This week, one piece found its person. Helene Farrar's bunny — soulful, a little whimsical, completely one of a kind — went home with someone who couldn't leave without it.

We love when that happens.

The Bunny by Helene Farrar — hand-sculpted, painterly texture
The Bunny by Helene Farrar — hand-sculpted, painterly texture
The Bunny

Someone picked it up, looked at it, and that was that. Helene carves and paints each animal by hand — no two are alike. This one is gone, but that feeling? That's the whole point.

Still looking for theirs

Helene also has a gray owl, wings fully spread, mid-flight — still here. And we're also featuring a stainless steel bluefin tuna by Alex Gall and a coastal painting by Kristine Biegel. All one of a kind. All waiting for the right person.

Steel Bluefin Tuna by Alex Gall — 48-inch stainless steel wall sculpture
Steel Bluefin Tuna by Alex Gall — 48-inch stainless steel wall sculpture
Steel Bluefin Tuna

Forty-eight inches of stainless steel bluefin, wall-mounted and lifelike. Alex captures the weight and movement of the fish in metal — the light shifts across it all day. It commands the wall. Come see it in person.

Pink Sky by Kristine Biegel — coastal Maine folk art paintings
Pink Sky by Kristine Biegel — coastal Maine folk art paintings
Pink Sky

Kristine paints Maine like she lives here — because she does. Bold color, quiet feeling. Lobster traps, dock light, sky going pink. You know exactly where you are.

Gray Owl sculpture by Helene Farrar — hand-sculpted wood, wings spread
Gray Owl sculpture by Helene Farrar — hand-sculpted wood, wings spread
Gray Owl

Wings fully spread, mid-flight. Helene carves and paints each animal by hand — no two are alike. This one has presence. The kind that makes a room feel different.

VISIT THE GALLERY

Check out the new mug story

P.S. — there are new mugs, fresh out of the kiln.

Stay in the loop

Letters from the gallery.

New issues, new pottery, and the occasional story from midcoast Maine.
No noise. Easy to leave.