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2024 Seaport Art Walk ‘Call of the Sea’ will be on display through October

Art2024 Seaport Art Walk 'Call of the Sea' will be on display through October


NEW BEDFORD — Lend your eyes an your ears for this year’s annual Seaport Art Walk in New Bedford. For over a decade, it has been a stunning, always interesting, and often playful visual feast, this year it incorporated harmonies that resonate with justice, action, and the soulful plea of the sea.

Seven artists answered the “Call of the Sea” for the 2024 New Bedford Seaport Art Walk and you can meet them at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, July 11, when the Seaport Art Walk officially opens during AHA! New Bedford.

“The Seaport Art Walk continues to set the bar for arts events in Greater New Bedford,” said Mayor Jon Mitchell in a press release. “We hope everyone has a chance to enjoy not only the compelling visual aspects of this year’s Art Walk, but the musical offerings as well.”

Meet the artists

Ed McAloon at Seaport Art Walk 2023

Ed McAloon recalls growing up by the beaches in New Bedford’s South End. “I spent almost every summer day on one of the city beaches in my youth. This was my introduction to the call of the sea. As this was within the decade of the 1960s, I was also fortunate to hear all the great music of the period every day on the radio. Needless to say, this included all of the great sounds of surf culture, especially bands like the Beach Boys.” Naturally, Ed thought that it would be nice if he created a 6-plus-foot-tall surfer for this year’s Art Walk. So he did, and hopes “it will enliven its viewers with their own memories of days at the beach listening to their favorite summer tunes.”

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Brooke Mullins Doherty at Seaport Art Walk 2023

Brooke Mullins Doherty found inspiration from a traditional sea shanty discovered by her children called “The Wellerman.” After conversations with the kids about New Bedford’s role in the whaling industry and the lives of the men aboard its ships, she began drawing to the beat of the sea shanty. “I began drawing the harmony of the chorus of The Wellerman as a fluid line that rises and sinks across vertical lines representing the steady beat,” she explains. “As I started experimenting with drawing these lines with curves, they began to take the form of octopus tentacles. When I joined these tentacles together at the base, they began to rise into the air and provide a structure that could connect with the line of visual harmony.” Thus, her sculpture “Sea Shanty” took the form of a song wrapped around an octopus.

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