June Fog, Monhegan
Oil on canvas
30" x 48"
$16,000

Well House
Oil on panel
12" x 43-1/2"
$5,500

South Bath
Oil on linen
24"x 24"
$6,000

Venus and Winter Moon
Oil on linen, attached to panel
18" x 18"
$4,600

Mid-Century
Oil on panel
18" x 18"
$4,600

Awnings
Oil on linen attached to panel
17" x 18"
SOLD

Tidal Ice, Maple Juice Cove
Oil on canvas, attached to panel
17" x 43"
$8,500

Oculus, Blue Hill Library
Oil on linen, attached to panel
17-1/2" x 12"
$3,500

Keld Call Box II
Oil on panel
20" x 16"
$4,600

Monhegan Village Morning
oil on panel
16" x 10 1/2"
$2,900

West Wind, Burton Cottage
Oil on panel
9" x 18-1/2"
SOLD

Burton Cottage, Monhegan
Oil on canvas
26" x 36"
SOLD

Green Gaze
Oil on canvas
24" x 24"
$6,000

Broad Cove, April
Oil on panel
20" x 38"
SOLD

Sun Spots
Oil on panel
19" x 14"
$4,500

Self-Portrait with Ski Patrol
Oil on panel
17" x 22"
SOLD

Last Light
Oil on canvas
36" x 20"
SOLD

Island Village, after Kent
Oil on canvas
32" x 52"
SOLD

Camden Snow Bowl II
Oil on panel
17" x 24"
SOLD

Willow Street, Rockland
Oil on panel
17" x 14"
$4,000

Wiscasset
Oil on panel
16" x 12"
$3,500

The Way Up
Oil on linen, attached to panel
22" x 16-1/2"
SOLD

The White Lion (Patterdale, England)
Oil on panel
13" x 14-1/2"
SOLD

Fair Weather Chairs
Oil on panel
12" x 12"
SOLD

Pitken Interior (Monhegan)
Oil on linen attached to panel
20" x 15"
SOLD

Shaker Fence Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village
oil on panel
9" x 9"
$1750

Snowbound Thomaston
oil on panel
12" x 10"
$2200

David Vickery

David Vickery is an artist based in Cushing, Maine. He has been working from his studio there since 1991. Vickery says his work is about unifying the natural with the man-made, as well as the simple pleasure of seeing, painting the point at which the optical and psychological meet.

Artist's Statement

"While I usually just paint whatever interests me, the work that results inevitably ends up integrating the natural world with the man-made. I seem to have an inner agenda, which is always seeking a harmony between the two, as well as a need to reconcile the inner, psychological world with the outer world of everyday experience and optical fact."