Donna Lacey-Derstine is a "Painter in the American Primitive Style" who grew up in rural
Buck's County, Pennsylvania where the countryside reflects an early American vista with stone
farmhouses and barns, rolling pastures and working farms. Her mother instilled a creative
sensibility in viewing the world and that influence, along with the artist's love of animals and
nature, became woven into her art at an early age.
After majoring in painting and illustration at Philadelphia College of Art, Derstine
moved first to the Rocky Mountains of Wyoming, then to a small island off the coast of Maine
and, finally, to the 1825 colonial farmhouse in the foothills of the White Mountains in western
Maine which she shares with her husband, son, two large dogs and an orange tabby. The
many landscapes of her life experience are threaded through her painting.
Derstine's painting integrates a range of themes and styles, including the idealized and
often whimsical work of the early American folk artists and English Naive school. Her subjects
are customary to Folk Art of the past: farm animals, trade and tavern signs, nursery rhymes,
country landscapes, yet include a sense of color and design which is distinctly Derstine's.
"From the traditional hand-planed pine boards to the layers of soft golden patina, I mold and
unify each piece to evoke the glow of an aged oil or the weathered charm of a rustic tavern
sign."
Her work is included in private collections throughout the U.S. and as far away as
Australia. In addition, Derstine's work has been featured in Early American Life (Best
Traditional Crafts 1989, '90, '91) and Country Home (1992) magazines.
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