Wet Paint Day 2026
In honor of Nancy Seamons Crookston
Saturday, March 28, 2026
10:00 am - 2:00 pm
South Shore Center
2242 Shore Center, Alameda, CA 94501
(Next to See's Candies )
The Frank Bette Center for the Arts is proud to host its third annual Wet Paint Day, held in preparation for the 21st Annual Plein Air Paint Out.
On the day of the event, participating artists will have the option of painting from a clothed model or working outdoors, plein air. Finished works will then be displayed for the public to view and purchase, with 40% of each sale benefiting the Nancy Seamons Crookston Award.
Event Details
Saturday, March 28, 2026
10:00 am - 2:00 pm
Location
South Shore Center — 2242 S Shore Center, Alameda, CA 94501
Next to See's Candy, in the room formerly occupied by the Alameda Art's Association
Suggested Donation $25
Sales & Proceeds
All sales are processed through the Frank Bette Center for the Arts. Artists receive 60% of each sale, with 40% going toward the Nancy Seamons Crookston Award at the 21st Annual Frank Bette Plein Air Paint Out, July 27–August 1, 2026. All donations go directly to this fund.
Participation
All mediums and people welcome.
Schedule
Wet Paint Session
10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Wet Paint Session Artists paint en plein air outdoors or from a clothed model on location.
Registration & Sale
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Artists register their work for sale and set up their own easels at South Shore Center.
Finished works go on display and are available for purchase by the public at South Shore Center, Alameda, CA.
More about Nancy Seamons Crookston
This event honors the legacy of Nancy Seamons Crookston, a renowned Alameda artist, award-winning oil painter, and Master Signature Member of the Oil Painters of America, who was an inspiration to her peers throughout the local art community. Funds raised will go directly toward the Plein Air Paint Out Nancy Crookston Award, established in her memory.
Born on November 23, 1948, in rural Hyde Park, Utah, the first of four children of Rhonda Raymond and Rendell Mack Seamons. Nancy loved her mom and dad, who helped her develop her insatiable curiosity and love for people, music, and the beauty of the world. She grew up in a small community of friends and family, climbing apple trees and eating too many green apples, floating zucchini boats down the canal, and running down the street to Grandma Melba and Grandpa Harvey's house or the candy store. That little girl with perfect ringlets and a big bright smile discovered sidewalk chalk and decided she wanted to become an artist. With sheer determination and hard work, she would eventually become a prolific, professional artist, represented in galleries and museums around the world, from Coronado to Charleston to China. Nancy went to Sky View High School and Utah State University, where she met Garr J. Crookston. Garr was smitten when he first saw her at the library and moved quickly to meet her. They were married on January 25, 1967, in Cache Valley, Utah. He was her true partner in life and was by her side every step of the way, even catching her when she collapsed on the morning of her death. They spent 56 years together, hardly ever apart. They lived in Bettendorf, Iowa; Pocatello, Idaho; Logan, Utah; and Alameda, California. They had five children and countless pets. She taught her children to love life, find a passion, be curious, and see the beauty in all people. Nancy juggled being a mom while being a full-time artist with complete grace and determination. She wore both hats so well people frequently asked how she did it. Early on in her career, Nancy learned from renowned Russian artist, Sergei Bongart. From penned sketches to watercolors to clay sculptures, she studied many art mediums and excelled in all of them. She was most widely known and awarded for her oil figure paintings, many featuring children on a beach, frolicking in the sand. After attending a sketching class at UC Berkeley in 2007 she was convinced that she needed to move to the Bay Area, where her work flourished even more with the art scene. How amazing the models were! It was like a candy store! She earned many awards over her career, including six Gold Medal awards from the Oil Painters of America, the most recent in October, the gold medal awarded at the Western Regional Exhibition for her painting, "I'll Show You How It's Done." She will be honored with a California Art Club signature member designation posthumously. Nancy and Garr sketched during breakfast at diners in Alameda almost every morning. She sometimes caught restaurant servers off guard when she would gush about their beautiful features and colors. It was almost like she was painting them in her head right then and there. She felt music like her late trumpet-playing father and loved hearing his favorite big band music. Nancy became fierce when she heard about any injustice in the world. She fought for women's rights. She hated prejudice. She wanted people to be open-minded and work together. Learning until the day she died, she was determined to become better, taking class after class. The day before she died, she took an online ganache course, and unbeknownst to her, completed her final painting of Santa, a series she had started decades prior. In the final year of her life, Nancy -- always the artist -- was drawn back to the sidewalk chalk of her youth. She'd create whimsical creations of characters crawling out of the sidewalk for the neighbors to enjoy as they walked by. Nancy was the best wife, mom, granny, sister, and daughter. She would boast about her wonderful, accomplished children and her "perfect" grandkids. Continuing forward is her husband Garr and their five children: Amelia (John Bullock), Jesse (Andrea Bishop), Sara (Jesse Sedillo), Raymond (Jessica Davis), and Maxwell (Sandy Khonnak); nine grandchildren (Taylor, Mary, Elizabeth, Samuel, Margaret, Ethan, Cooper, Lucy, Simon); nine great-grandchildren; her brother Jay (Marsha), sister Renee (Ross) and brother Clayton (Julie). She was preceded in death by her parents, Rendell and Rhonda Seamons. Nancy Seamons Crookston, a designated Oil Painters of America Master and one of the most widely recognized artists in the nation, died Friday, November 17, 2023, from complications of shoulder surgery. She was 74, a week away from her Thanksgiving Day birthday.




















