Share: 

Constructions exhibit to open at Peninsula Gallery July 5

June 27, 2025

The Peninsula Gallery announced its Constructions exhibition will open with a reception from 5 to 6:30 p.m., Saturday, July 5. Some of the exhibiting artists will be in attendance, allowing guests the opportunity to learn about the pieces directly from their creators. 

All artists create work, but only some construct it. Peninsula Gallery’s July exhibition asks viewers to observe how five artists — Joseph Barbaccia, Melanie Berry, Peggy Black, Carol Lehmann and Jason Lyons — piece together a puzzle of seemingly arbitrary objects to create a whole work of art. This showcase, which combines 2-D and 3-D artwork, puts emphasis on the physicality of the art-making process, allowing visitors to explore the many intricacies featured in each of the 42 original works.

Working in a variety of mediums from his home and studio in Georgetown, Joseph Barbaccia is inspired by his personal history and the world around him. His artistic process involves experimentation and exploration, pushing the boundaries of his chosen medium. Barbaccia constructs the works for this show through polymer clay, a versatile and forgiving medium that allows him to create intricate details and textures. He uses the medium to create a variety of scenes, including animal portraits, local landscapes and still lifes, as well as a special stained glass-style piece.

Melanie Berry uses common, everyday materials to create pieces with strong ties to decorative art and popular craft. Although repurposed, her materials are still recognizable as objects made for another use, suggesting that meaning and value can be found by looking at something in a different way. In this exhibition, Berry’s mosaic designs are rooted in the Gibson Girl archetype, a century-old symbol of idealized womanhood preserved in the American psyche and reproduced on the china plates that are broken and reassembled to make each artwork. 

Peggy Black, a full-time textile studio artist in rural Jenner Township, Pa., studied under acclaimed quilter Nancy Crow for 10 years. She is an improvisational machine piecer, creating original art without using rulers or measurements. Rhythm and repetition, as well as abstract line patterning, are at the core of her designs. During the past several years, she has been dyeing her own fabrics using wringer washers and MX dyes. In this exhibit, Black is featuring two extra-large quilt works from her “Critter” series. These pieces — one monochromatic and the other a colorful explosion of rust, plum and navy — use geometric shapes and patchwork to create striking wall-hanging art.  

Largely self-taught, Carol Lehmann believes that the art of craft transforms, connects and empowers her to explore different mediums and techniques without reserve. Based near the Delaware Bay, her growing portfolio of work now includes works of encaustic, collage and sculpture, along with unique copper enameled jewelry creations. For this exhibition, Lehmann is displaying two different types of constructed art. Five pieces utilize collage to create whimsical scenes of famous artists’ homes, which combine the selected artist’s iconic style with Lehmann’s eclectic imagination. Her other five pieces are 3-D sculptures that create their stories through found objects and tucked-away details.

Through an inherent passion for the discarded object, Jason Lyons has developed a unique perspective and talent to visually dissect, reinterpret and then repurpose the materials found in his sculptures. He creates his work from discarded, man-made objects that come together to form sculptures of natural things, such as flowers, birds, fish and insects. He finds unique shapes buried within the objects, reinterpreting them into the anatomical structures that make up the larger work. 

Works from the show can be previewed at peninsula-gallery.com. The exhibit continues through Sunday, July 27. 

The gallery is located in the Village Shoppes at the Beacon Inn, 520 East Savannah Road, Lewes.