Lindsay Aromin
Lindsay Aromin
During my travels, I feel drawn to flowers for their vibrant colors, tones and fantastic textures. Going through my photos I realized I took more pictures of flowers than people. Only my museum shots outnumbered them. I have even stopped the car so I could go out and take pictures of some vivid colors that caught my eye along the roadside.
I wanted to tell a story about artists and how we worked and thought and planned before we picked up a brush. My paintings start with one of my photos and devolve into a small painting and then into an abstraction of that painting. They are happy paintings that come out of a difficult time in my life and also in our country's life. I believe that you have to look at the brighter side of things and art will take you there
My background in art is strange. I was told as a third-grader that I could not draw and I took music lessons and I never had an art class. After taking a drawing-one class in a local college at the ripe old age of 52 and then transferring to U Conn where I graduated with a BFA Summa Cum Laude at age 58 and then on to my MFA at Vermont College at 60 years. After school, I reached out to Norwich Arts Gallery and have been a member since then.


Chelsea Players Present
At the Still Point
​$18 General Admission
$16 Seniors/Military/Student
$15 Members
Friday, May 23 — 7 pm
Saturday, May 24 — 3 pm
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Friday, May 30 — 7 pm
Saturday, May 31 — 7 pm​​
A drama in two acts by Emily Dykes
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The Chelsea Players, in collaboration with the Norwich Arts Center, present the drama, At the Still Point, a play about life, memory, and what really matters, was written by Chelsea Player Emily Dykes and directed by her brother Daniel Dykes.
Ruth, imperious and embittered, is nearing the end of her life — in Norwich, a place she never wanted to live. Her granddaughter Bethany has the thankless task of caring for her. As Ruth’s present contracts, her past expands, and her young self begins to appear to her. Time past and time future collide, regrets and lost loves rise again, and Ruth learns that what’s right in front of you can be as beautiful as what’s past.​