06/15/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/15/2026 11:09
ISSUED: June 11, 2026
CONTACT: Kate Lochner, [email protected]
July 6 | 7:00 PM
Rhea Vedro, Blacksmithing; John Fifield-Perez, Fiber; Tom Martin, Writing; J Taran Diamond, Metals.
July 7 | 7:00 PM
Gillan Doty, Ceramics; Emma Senft, Wood; Jaida Grey Eagle, Graphics; Adam Zapotok, Fab Lab.
Throughout the summer, Haystack faculty, visiting artists, studio assistants, and Fab Lab residents share their inspirations, ideas, and work as part of our 2026 Public Programs series. Presentations take place in Haystack's Gateway Auditorium, located at 89 Haystack School Drive, Deer Isle, Maine. These events are free and open to the public.
Visit haystack-mtn.org/visit for detailed descriptions of Public Programs.
Date: Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Time: 4:00-5:00 PM
Location: Haystack Mountain School of Crafts
Address: 89 Haystack School Drive, Deer Isle, Maine
Studio Walk-Throughs are free and open to the public. Please note that while the studios are open to the public during the campus walk-through, the dining hall is only open to staff and program participants.
Haystack Mountain School of Crafts is an international craft school located on the Atlantic Ocean in Deer Isle, Maine. For 75 years, Haystack has connected people through craft, providing the freedom to engage with materials and develop new ideas in a supportive and inclusive community. When Haystack was founded in 1950, it was truly an experiment in education and community, with no permanent faculty or full-time students-a School that awarded no certificates or degrees. Haystack serves an ever-changing group of makers and thinkers of all skill levels-we are dedicated to working and learning alongside one another, while exploring the intersections of craft, art, and design in wide-ranging and expansive ways.
For three-quarters of a century, Haystack has offered intensive studio workshops and has functioned as a think-tank to explore craft in broad contexts. The School's award-winning campus, designed by noted American architect Edward Larrabee Barnes, opened in 1961 when the School relocated to Deer Isle from its original location in Montville, Maine. The buildings and secluded, natural setting have provided steadfast support for convening an intergenerational community of makers from around the world to share ideas, materials, and techniques, and make discoveries alongside one another in a creative and generative environment. While Haystack has grown in ways that could never have been imagined-offering residencies, programs for Maine youth and adults, conferences, publications, and more-the core of our work and the ideas we adhere to have stayed very much the same.