ABOUT US
Carrie Goller Gallery is a vibrant showcase for a select group of Pacific Northwest artists. We thrive on connecting these artists with collectors and buyers, here in our community and worldwide.
Our artists specialize in diverse forms and subject matter from plein air to still life: landscapes, creatures and figurative paintings, photography, sculpture, artisan gifts, and jewelry. Utilizing world-renowned techniques such as encaustic (painting with molten pigmented beeswax), egg tempera, oil, watercolor, mixed media, acrylic, glass, metal, wood, and stone.
We are located on Puget Sound's Liberty Bay in historic downtown Poulsbo, a town rich in Scandinavian influence honoring the Norwegians that settled here.
For hours and location details, see CONTACT.
Please join us for Art Walk which is held each month on the 2nd Saturday 5-8 pm.
WHAT IS ENCAUSTIC?
Encaustic is the very earliest known form of paint, first used by the Greeks over 2000 years ago. The amazing Fayum Mummy Portraits were painted in encaustic by the Greeks in Egypt. They are still fresh and vibrant, and are exhibited today in the world's greatest galleries.
Encaustic painting involves melting, applying, then heat fusing layers of beeswax (resin and pigment can be added). The wax gives an optical depth unique to the medium.
Encaustic has returned from obscurity as modern tools have made the process more practical. Diego Rivera used encaustic in the 1930's on his murals. Jasper Johns is credited with the current renaissance of encaustic fine art with his work that began in the 1950's.
"Why paint in a process-intensive medium that's over 2000 years old?" is rarely asked. That answer is a given: luminosity, rich surface, the beauty of the wax.
Carrie Goller interprets this ancient medium into very contemporary work, creating paintings with brilliant luminosity, as well as some with a rich, delicate opalescence. Maintaining their freshness and intensity, they will not darken or yellow. Because of the protective nature of wax they are impervious to moisture and need not be varnished or put under glass.