Bio
Trelawney Goodell creates photomontages and triptychs which combine multiple images into a single visual statement to tell a broader story. Her approach to photography, as both graphic and narrative, is influenced by her many years as an art director, developing visual materials for young children. Her publishing experience, focused on visual literacy, has encouraged her to see the ordinary in unique ways.
Trelawney has exhibited her photographs in juried solo shows at the Cary Memorial Library, Lexington, MA Her most recent show, “A Salute to the Colors”, celebrated the Patriots’ Day Parade during Lexington’s 300th year celebration. Group exhibitions include the School of the Museum of Fine Arts annual shows and sale, the Photography Atelier at Lesley University, the Griffin Museum of Photography, and Rocky Neck Art Colony, Gloucester, MA. Her photographs have been in juried group shows in Lexington including “A Community Creates”, “Orange”, “Fresh”, and “Celebrate Boston.” Trelawney’s work is in many private collections nationally,.
Trelawney majored in art at Connecticut College and graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, with a major in fine art print-making. She has studied photography at Lesley University and the Griffin Museum of Photography with Karen Davis and taken courses in digital imaging and web design at Massachusetts College of Art and Design.