History of the
Monhegan Artists Residency
In 1988 Raquel and Peter Boehmer had a dream. The
dream evolved out of the realization that rents on
Monhegan were getting very high and most serious
young artists could not afford to spend time on the
island experiencing the light, the color, the community,
the rugged headlands, and the fishing shacks that
had inspired the likes of William Trost Richards,
George Bellows, Charles Ebert, Rockwell Kent, Eric
Hudson, and James Fitzgerald. The dream was to develop
an artist residency program that would allow some
serious Maine artists to live for a period of several
weeks on the island, free from all responsibilities,
so they could experiment and grow. The residency
would provide them a time for reflection that they
could use any way they chose.
The Carina House
, Home of the Residency for the first 18 years The Boehmers shared their dream with their good
friend Robert Semple who was a well-known fiber artist
on Monhegan. At the time, Semple had owned the Carina
House for many years, but in 1987 he had made an
agreement with the Boehmers to sell them the Carina
House when he was no longer able to return to the
island. Semple loved the idea of an artist residency
and was delighted by the possibility of using the
Carina House for that purpose. During the summer
of 1988 he decided that his deteriorating health
would not allow him to return the following year,
so the sale of the house went forward.
The Boehmers also discussed their plan with Chris
Crosman, Director of the Farnsworth Museum in Rockland
, and he helped to formulate the program and bring
it to fruition. The Farnsworth has provided some
financial support each year of the program.
In 1989, the first two residents were selected and
each spent six weeks in residence on Monhegan. Living
was rent-free, and each resident received a modest
stipend for living expenses. Residents were not permitted
to have family or friends with them; it was their
time to be with themselves, with the island, with
their work. The residents lived on the second floor
of the Carina House, and initially their studio was
on the second floor of what is now the Lupine Gallery
provided as a donation by Bill Payne. Eventually,
the Boehmers added a studio to the second floor of
the Carina House.
During its first few years the Carina House Residency
was truly a mom-and-pop operation. The Boehmers did
most of the work and paid many of the program's expenses
out of their own pockets. Gradually, ex-residents
began to help with the work—organizing mailings and
jurying the applications, for example—and eventually
other individuals who were Monhegan regulars or supporters
of the arts in Maine began to make financial contributions.
In years when contributions were adequate to do so,
a very modest rent was paid to the Boehmers.
By the end of the first six years it became clear
that it would be useful to make the endeavor somewhat
more formal. So, a new not-for-profit corporation
was formed—the Monhegan Artists Residency Corporation.

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