Murals pop up at Delaware Agricultural Museum in Dover

Delaware State News
Posted 5/7/22

DOVER — Spring is a time for renewal and growth. Nowhere is that more evident than at the Delaware Agricultural Museum and Village, a private nonprofit museum that represents Delaware’s largest and most important industry and the center for interpretation of 19th century life in Delaware’s rural communities.

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Murals pop up at Delaware Agricultural Museum in Dover

Posted

DOVER — Spring is a time for renewal and growth. Nowhere is that more evident than at the Delaware Agricultural Museum and Village, a private nonprofit museum that represents Delaware’s largest and most important industry and the center for interpretation of 19th century life in Delaware’s rural communities.

Special to the museum’s renewal initiatives is the artistry of Lewes resident, Natalie McIntyre, who has worked at the museum over the past two years capturing the beauty and charm of Delaware’s rural landscape through her paintings. Ms. McIntyre’s artistry is reflected in murals adorning the walls of the museum’s main exhibit hall as well as in individual paintings for sale in the museum’s gift shop.

The murals provide the backdrop for exhibits highlighting the work of Delaware artisans, the importance of the state’s chicken industry and the drivers of technological change in farming.

“I am always looking at what we see every day, whether it’s a bird on a roof, a tractor in a field or an old random snapshot,” Ms. McIntyre said.

“So often I see something that makes me stop and look again – that’s what inspires me to paint. I love meandering drives down the backroads of Delaware, but the discovery of the Delaware Agricultural Museum and Village has given me a new source of inspiration.”

In summer 2022, through collaboration with a variety of individuals, private sector businesses and organizations, the museum will launch a large-scale permanent indoor/outdoor exhibit “Then One Day the Lights Came On” exploring the impact of rural electrification on agriculture and the lives of people in Delaware’s rural communities.

“Natalie is a truly gifted artist. Nowhere is her talent more evident than in the transitions mural she recently completed for the rural electrification exhibit, where she expertly captures the essence of the Delaware countryside,” museum’s executive director Carolyn Claypoole said.

“Pictures don’t do it justice. You really need to see this mural and the other beautiful murals Natalie has painted for yourself.”

For museum days and hours of operation, visit here.

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