Jill McGaughey, Owner Jill McGaughey, Owner

What I Look For.

Every artwork in the gallery has a reason for being. Before a piece earns wall space, it has to pass a simple—though not always easy—test. I look for three things: stopping power, a recognizable artistic voice, and staying power. When those elements come together, a work of art not only captures our attention but continues to resonate long after we’ve walked away.

Read More
Jill McGaughey, Owner Jill McGaughey, Owner

Made you look.

In Dean Mitchell’s Steppin’ Hard, a single figure moves with quiet authority across the canvas. Seen slightly from below and walking with purpose, the subject feels fully alive—caught in motion, carrying the weight of a story we sense but are never fully told. Mitchell strips away the surrounding environment, leaving only a sun-washed ground and the figure’s stride, allowing us to focus on the humanity, rhythm, and presence of the moment.

Read More
Jill McGaughey, Owner Jill McGaughey, Owner

The Edge of Modern.

In The Edge of Modern, Dean Mitchell captures a moment of quiet transition. The painting reflects a landscape where older rural traditions still endure, even as modern methods reshape how people live and work on the land. Mitchell’s brushwork moves to the very boundary between realism and abstraction—so concise that a single removed stroke might cause the scene to dissolve into geometry. Yet the barn remains steady on the horizon, enduring and grounded, a quiet witness to generations who have lived and labored on the land.

Read More
Jill McGaughey, Owner Jill McGaughey, Owner

A Golden Age

Rolland Golden’s Port of New Orleans captures a moment when the Mississippi River waterfront was alive with working ships and global commerce. Begun in 1959 and completed decades later in 2010, the painting bridges two eras in Golden’s long career. With masterful draftsmanship and rich textural brushwork, he portrays a Lykes Brothers cargo ship dominating the riverfront—an image that evokes the sounds, scale, and energy of New Orleans during the height of its working port.

Read More