- artist list
- listed alphabetically
- Akinjobi, Lucille
- Alterman, Jack
- Blagden, Tom
- Blair, Carl
- Brady, Patti
- Brown, Keith
- Cart, Julia
- Carter, Eva
- Châteauvert, Jocelyn
- Corrigan, Lese
- Fantuzzo, Linda
- Folk, Buddy
- Fraser, Mary Edna
- Gillens, Cassandra
- Green, Anthony
- Holloway, Jon
- Hubbard, Ann
- Jasinski, Liisa Salosaari
- Johnson, Erik
- Keats, Kim
- Loney, Kit
- Mardikian, Paul
- Marshall, Nancy
- Matheny, Paul
- McWilliams, John
- Middleton, Sue
- Moody, Marge
- Nicholson, Gordon
- Nodine, Jane
- Novo, Marcelo
- Olah, Karin
- Overend, Matt
- Rhodes, Rick
- Rice, Edward
- Right, Molly B.
- Romaine, Susan
- Ryba, Kristi
- Scotchie, Virginia
- Spong, Laura
- Stanley, Tom
- Tedesco, Christine
- Terrell, Colleen
- Twiggs, Leo
- Vander Meijden, Tjelda
- Walker, Mary
- Wallace, Sue Simons
- Walters, Joe
- Wang, Sam
- Williams, Enid
- Williams, Manning
- Yanko, Paul
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The Beach iris print on 300lb watercolor paper 20” x 28 ½”






Artist Biography:
John McWilliams was born in 1941 and currently resides in McClellanville. He received his the B.F.A. and M.F.A. from Rhode Island School of Design and is Professor/Director Emeritus of Georgia State University School of Art and Design. McWilliams has received numerous awards, including the Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship and the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in photography.
In 1988, McWilliams published Land of Deepest Shade with the Aperture Foundation and the High Museum. He began building a 24-foot wooden sloop in 1981 and completed it in 1985. Upon completion, he sailed the “Santee” in the waters from Cape Hatteras, NC to Florida and to Bermuda.
John McWilliams
McClellanville
Contact the Artist
About the Work:
“My work is inspired by experiences and life in the Lowcountry, where the issues of life and its transitions are so poignantly felt within the landscape. My interest in art began with photography, but in the 1990’s I returned to the practice of drawing and painting and then expanded into printmaking and book arts. My primary focus in printmaking is woodcuts and wood engravings.”