Private Viewing
Philip Barter: New Acquisitions
Philip Barter (1939–2024) is lauded as one of Maine’s most iconic painters. From the moment he began exhibiting in 1966, his stylized landscapes and gritty narratives of Downeast life captivated collectors. With his bold, eye-popping palette and reductive forms, Barter transformed the Maine landscape into a powerful and deeply personal visual language.
In his quest to pare down a subject, Barter carried a small sketchbook in his breast pocket. This practice allowed him to isolate the defining shapes within a scene—pointed firs, towering clouds, or the commanding peaks of Mount Katahdin. Over time, these organic geometric forms became enduring touchstones in Barter’s work. Since his passing, his wife, Priscilla, has carefully archived hundreds of these intimate sketches into albums, preserving a vital record of his creative process.

A self-taught artist from Boothbay, Maine, Barter traveled to California in the 1960s, where he met and worked with abstract expressionist painter Alfonso Sosa. The painter introduced Barter to what he described as a “charge of light and color” that would influence his aesthetic vision for the next six decades. It was in California where Barter first encountered the work of fellow Maine-born artist Marsden Hartley. Feeling a strong artistic kinship with Hartley, Barter was inspired to return to Maine and devote himself fully to painting.
Back in Boothbay Harbor, Barter met painter and sculptor Frederick “Fritz” Rockwell, who further encouraged his artistic ambitions. By the 1970s, Barter and Priscilla had moved to downeast Maine, where they raised their seven children. Faced with the challenge of supporting a large family, Barter stepped away from painting for nearly a decade to work in traditional Maine trades—clamming, worm digging, working as a sternman on a lobster boat, carpentry, and dragging for mussels. In his spare time, Barter studied art history, and together he and Priscilla cultivated a home life deeply rooted in art and creativity. Barter’s affinity for Maine’s working people lend an unmistakable authenticity to his narrative paintings.
When Barter returned to painting full-time in the 1990s, he began receiving widespread critical acclaim. In 1992, the Bates College Museum of Art mounted a retrospective of Barter’s work, and his paintings entered the collections of the Bates College Museum of Art, the Farnsworth Art Museum, and the Portland Museum of Art. He was profiled in Down East magazine in 1995, and humorist Tim Sample featured his life and work in a “Postcards from Maine” segment on CBS Sunday Morning with Charles Kuralt. In 2017, Marshall Wilkes published Philip Barter: Forever Maine, a monograph on the artist’s life and career written by Carl Little.
PHILIP BARTER (1939–2024)
Mt Katahdin
oil on board, 36 x 48 inches
$20,000 




