Katharine A. Cartwright

During her earliest years, Katharine Cartwright's parents encouraged her to engage in the fine arts. Therefore, her earliest desire was to become a painter, and she has spent most of her life engaged as such. Formal academic training in the arts began at Linden Hall School in Pennsylvania, and continued at Kutztown University, The College of Charleston, and the Maryland College Institute of Art. Her work is included in hundreds of private and corporate collections, has won top awards in dozens of international juried exhibitions, and appears in many art publications both here and abroad.
In addition to her life-long career as an artist, Kathy studied the geosciences, and received her Masters Degree from Syracuse University. She then served on the geosciences faculty of
Skidmore College as a Lecturer.
Presently, Kathy works from her studio in Spruce Head, Maine where she resides.


Portfolio:

The Laws of Nature

This series of watercolor paintings is inspired by the physical laws that govern our universe, and man's inability to devise the perfect machine run by perpetual motion because of the limitations imposed by our physical laws.
These paintings were created solely from my imagination and intuition without the use of external references or models.

Brewster's Law “Brewster's Law”

watercolor on paper

Entropy “Entropy”

watercolor on paper

Ampere's Law “Ampere's Law”

watercolor on paper

Fourier's Law “Fourier's Law”

watercolor on paper

The Law of Inertia “The Law of Inertia”

watercolor on paper

Kirschhoff's First Law “Kirschhoff's First Law”

watercolor on paper

Darcy's Law “Darcy's Law”

watercolor on paper

Complementarity “Complementarity”

watercolor on paper

Gay-Lussac Law “Gay-Lussac Law”

watercolor on paper

Hooke's Law “Hooke's Law”

watercolor on paper

Lambert's Third Law “Lambert's Third Law”

watercolor on paper

InstruMental

This watercolor series is inspired by my love of music and the instruments that make it. I challenged myself to create designs and colors that also depict the sound that each instrument makes and its personality.

French Horn “French Horn”

watercolor on paper

Clarinet “Clarinet”

watercolor on paper

Banjo “Banjo”

watercolor on paper

Bassoon “Bassoon”

watercolor on paper

Piccolo “Piccolo”

watercolor on paper

Mandolin “Mandolin”

watercolor on paper

Harp “Harp”

watercolor on paper