Barn Burning w/ Graham Lindsey

Art in the cafe...

Dottie and Josie Brand (Two Peas in a Pod)


"Summer Magic"


June 2026



We are self-taught artists who create work inspired by healing, nature, travel, and personal experiences. Growing up, art became a way for us to process emotions, express ourselves, and create spaces that felt meaningful and comforting. Our first “gallery” was our college apartment, which we transformed with our own artwork and nature-inspired design and the power of the feminine. Sharing our space and work with others encouraged us to continue creating and exploring art more seriously. Inspired by our Latin culture, color, emotion, and everyday moments, our work reflects themes of connection, growth,...
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Art Paul Schlosser


"Celebrities You Might Know"


July 2026



Artist statement: Hi, I'm Art Paul Schlosser and I have been painting for years but recently painting a painting a day has stretch my ability and I have found that I am getting better and have moved beyond abstract and flowers and animals to painting portraits and with the encouragement of my friend Chris Kammer I have done a whole bunch of famous people but perhaps somewhat in cartoon form. I hope you like some of these celebrities and I hope you like how I used in some cases other people's paintings for the background. I have found recycling used canvases at Dig...
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Saturday, May 29, 2004

\"[Barn Burning\'s]influence is not from country, but from the country; not of Nashville-inspired Southern country music, but of the rural spaces of New England. And that means that, while there are acoustic guitars, mandolins, dobros, banjos and twangy voices, a different language is being spoken. Is \"New England country music\" a category? Maybe it should be. And Barn Burning would be one of the first and finest examples.\" - Providence Journal

Graham Lindsey: \"In a voice that spits, sneers, howls and hopes, he lays bare beauty and ugliness, rails at his failings, and offers up his heart. Like Dylan, Cohen, Kerouac and Townes, Lindsey\'s relentlessly percussive, consonant verses are calculated and writerly, but they come out in a gush, the better to capture the frantic tangle of his fears and desires. ...the most audacious roots songwriter\'s debut since Gillian Welch\'s Revival.\" -NO DEPRESSION

\"Lindsey ekes out the kind of country music that Nashville forgot, thankfully without pop influence. His voice is as gravelly but earnest as John Prine\'s, and his lyrical stanzas are long enough to make three-pack-a-day smokers faint.\" -Baltimore City Paper