Gallows Hill Artists Presents Open Studios
Saturday, December 6, 2025
11:00 AM to 6:00 PM
New and Expanded Artist Studios in Salem
Studio Tours, Meet Our 28 Artists
Holiday Art Market & Gallery Exhibitions
16 Proctor Street, Salem MA 01970
Attendance is FREE and open to the public.
Here’s your chance to visit Gallows Hill Artists. Home to a hard-working and growing collective of 28 talented artists in Salem’s only communal artist studio space. In early 2025 Gallows Hill Artists expanded the studios with a major renovation to add an additional 14 studios expanding to feature 12,000 square feet of artist space on two floors of our historic building. Due to high demand for creative workspace, we now host a growing community of 28 artists covering a wide variety of styles and media.
Please visit and support your local artists, view our renovated and expanded galleries and studios, shop at our artist market, and enjoy an afternoon of creativity.
Artists include James Bostick, Photography; Matao Aric Bonner, Photography; Kyle Bromley, Photography; David Burr, Painting; Bobbie Bush, Digital Painting; Jill Christian, Painting; Carol Cross, Glass Arts; Francois DeCosterd, Painting and Multi-Media; Laurel Driskill, Painting and Fashion; Michelle Dumas, Multi-media; Kate Drewniak, Fiber Arts; Dewa Goncalves, Painting; E. B. Goodale, Illustration and Printmaking; Deborah Greel, Mixed Media; Joey Higgins, Photography; CJ Karch, Photography and Puppetry; Oskar Kraft, Painting; Dale Ducillo Lewinski, Painting and Jewelry; Christen Mailler, Painting; Siobhan McDonald, Painting; Katherine Miura, Painting; Linda Mullen “Grace and Diggs”, Wearable Art and Immersive Environments; Jessica Murdock, Painting and Drawing; Seseley Paige, Fashion Design; Craig Robertson, Painting; Amanda Skinner, Painting; Erin Survilas, Painting; and Lee Wolf, Illustration and Painting.
Gallows Hill Artists is located in a historic warehouse in Salem’s Gallows Hill neighborhood. Our creative space features two floors of original post and beam interiors reminiscent of its factory roots. Just steps from Proctor’s Ledge, this historic location overlooks the site of Salem’s infamous 1692 hanging of 19 innocent people. The warehouse was originally built around 1900 as one of Salem’s great tanneries, The Arthur J Mulholland Company, and remains as one that survived the Great Salem Fire of 1914. This building is one of the only remaining tannery buildings in Salem.