Marine Art Program: “The Beauty and Challenges of Life Above and Below the Piscataqua River”
Workshop Details
Middle and High School Students Only (Grades 6-12)
· Week long: July 21-25 2025; $450/student for the week Thanks to a donor, Limited Scholarships available for Maine students with need.
9:00 am - 3:00 pm Marine Art: SOLD OUT
Maximum 20 students (minimum 15)
Drop-off/pick-up Location:
Days 1-3: 66 Ceres Street, Portsmouth (Portsmouth Harbor Cruises, near tugboats)
Days 4-5 Kittery Art Association, 2 Walker St, Kittery, ME 03904 (Kittery Foreside)
OVERVIEW: Join us for an immersive journey into the dynamic relationship between marine life on the surface and below the Piscataqua River and its estuaries. Students will board the M/V Utopia, a 38-foot U.S. Coast Guard-inspected lobster boat, transforming it into a mobile classroom. With guidance from marine scientists and artists, students will explore marine habitats and gain firsthand experience of the ecosystem’s beauty and challenges. This unique program blends marine ecology education with artistic practice, offering middle and high school students the chance to creatively explore and portray the Piscataqua River region.
Days 1-3 On board the 38’ lobster boat, Utopia and at Wood Island Life Saving Station
Students will get out on the water on the 38’ lobster boat, Utopia, with marine biologists and engineers to explore below the Piscataqua River with Underwater Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROV)—Think underwater drone/camera!- and explore on-shore the tide pools and coastline of Wood Island (located at the mouth of the Piscataqua River). Students will capture ROV video footage and personal photography to inspire artwork.
Learn various artistic techniques: Students will engage with local artists and explore various artistic mediums to express their interpretations of marine life, including watercolor painting, cyanotype printing, sculpture, videography. They will select one medium to create their art project and start to work on that project while continuing to be inspired by the ocean environment on Wood Island at the Life Saving Station.
Days 4-5 Kittery Art Association’s Hub
Students will continue to develop their creative projects at the Kittery Art Association’s HUB studio working alongside artists to finalize their work.
Community Showcase: Students will write artist statements during the program and present their works in an art exhibit. This exhibit will highlight marine conservation and spark community dialogue about the preservation of marine life above and below the Piscataqua River.
Fee includes: CoastX T-Shirt and hat, art materials, boat transportation, art and marine experts. Does NOT include Lunch (students to bring their own lunch)
Additional Notes: All students required to wear CoastX provided new lifejackets while on docks/boat. Some of the program happens on the 38' boat with a captain and crew. There will be at least 3 additional CoastX program adults working with students as part of the program at all times.



Meet the CoastX Artists-in-Residence
The CoastX Marine Art Program will be led by an amazing and talented team... All bringing great art skills to your child!

Betsy Wish
Betsy Wish is a multifaceted artist and community figure based in Kittery, Maine. After retiring from a career in education, she relocated to Kittery in 2007, where she immersed herself in the local arts scene and community initiatives. Known for her inventive mixed-media sculptures, Wish often incorporates recycled materials, reflecting her commitment to environmental sustainability. She has conducted various workshops at the Kittery Art Association, including sessions on eco-sculpture and mixed-media gift boxes, fostering creativity and environmental awareness among participants
Beyond her contributions to the arts, Wish is affectionately known in the community for her unique initiative dubbed "kayaking with cookies." For over a decade, she has paddled along the local waterways, accompanied by her dog Maggie, delivering homemade cookies to lobstermen as a gesture of goodwill and community building.

Scott Heisey
Scott Heisey is a trained artist, and third generation NH lobsterman with over 40 years experience fishing coastal waters. Scott is in a unique position to intimately observe both the amazing diversity within the Piscataqua River Basin as well as the ever increasing changes in the local fisheries due to disruptive environmental impacts.

Jiff Cornwell
Artist-Educator Jiff Cornwell has been teaching classes and workshops on the NH Seacoast, Western Mass, and Guatemala in a myriad of settings, including Alternative Schools for teens, Adult Education, Art Schools, International Travel Programs, as well as Vocational and NGO programs in Guatemala.
She is a firm believer in the power of imagery, creative energy, and art exploration to offer paths to deep insight and positive change for all who engage in art making.