About the artist
Upon retiring in 2017 after 40 years of teaching art at Williams College, Ed Epping moved to New Mexico and began fully dedicating himself to his own art making.
Central to his work has been The Corrections Project, a multi-tiered and multi-media exploration of injustice in the United State’s criminal justice system. Troubled by recollections of his own father’s comparatively easy imprisonment for embezzlement (“he was an accountant, white, and privileged”), Ed chose to “explore incarceration and over-criminalization more broadly, and look at the populations most impacted by criminal justice abuse.”
Featuring selections from The Corrections Project, Ed’s exhibition is as much a catalyst for advocacy as an art show.
exhibition events
acknowledgements
Thank you to Rising Tide Co-op, a trusted community resource for high-quality, natural, sustainable foods and goods located in Damariscotta, for in-kind catering for Ed Epping’s opening reception.
Puddle Dock Village Festival is a Studio B Project
Studio B uses arts and humanities to support community justice and wellbeing. We seek to empower marginalized and isolated populations through art experiences, exhibitions, and community programs that address pressing social issues, while also highlighting our shared humanity. Learn more about Studio B here.