Mark Vinsel and Dianne Anderson, Juneau artists and husband and wife, are planning to retire from Juneau’s professional arts community and eventually move from the area. Here they stand in Juneau Artists Gallery Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018. (Ben Hohenstatt | Capital City Weekly)

Mark Vinsel and Dianne Anderson, Juneau artists and husband and wife, are planning to retire from Juneau’s professional arts community and eventually move from the area. Here they stand in Juneau Artists Gallery Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018. (Ben Hohenstatt | Capital City Weekly)

Longtime Juneau artists put down paintbrushes for suitcases

Husband and wife ‘retiring’ from art

Their work here is nearly done.

Longtime Juneau artist Mark Vinsel and Dianne Anderson, who are husband and wife, are planning to step away from Juneau and its professional arts community over the course of 2019. Works by Anderson and Vinsel will be featured at Juneau Artists Gallery beginning Jan. 4, and they will be on display throughout the month ahead of what the artists are calling their retirement.

“I’ll miss the contact with everyone and having a venue,” Anderson told the Capital City Weekly during a lengthy conversation at Juneau Artists Gallery. “It will be a huge loss.”

Anderson has been a fixture at Juneau Artists Gallery, a local artists cooperative, for more than 20 years, and she has been a member of the community for even longer.

“They call me the den mother,” Anderson said. “It seems like I’m always cleaning up.”

Anderson moved to Juneau from Anchorage in the mid ’80s to teach. She taught art classes at University of Alaska Southeast for 22 years and served as an art specialist for public, private and charter schools in Juneau.

“I totally love Juneau,” Anderson said. “It’s been a wonderful place to teach. I have people 6 feet tall coming up to me and saying, ‘Hi Miss Dianne,’ and I don’t recognize them because when I had them they were up to here.”

She gestured to about waist level and said she’s always enjoyed running into past students as well as seeing them progress from grade school to the university.

“That’s one of the things I’m really going to miss,” Anderson said.

Vinsel, who sketches, paints in watercolors and works with wood, has been a Juneauite since 2000. He too is deeply involved with the Juneau Artists Gallery and serves as treasurer.

He moved to the area from California 18 years ago because of Anderson.

They struck up an email correspondence through a mutual friend before the new millennium. They hit it off online and later in person, and Vinsel relocated to Juneau.

Vinsel’s day job is working for the advocacy group United Fisherman of Alaska, and he is anticipating days when casting a rod and creating art make up the bulk of his to-do list.

“I’m looking forward to time when I don’t have to do anything other than paint and fish,” Vinsel said.

Favorite projects and dreams deferred

Both Vinsel and Anderson said their time in Alaska — particularly in Juneau — has had an indelible effect on their lives and work.

Vinsel has made boats, frames and instruments that he likely would not have created living anywhere else.

“I think we all get inspired by how good our wood is,” Vinsel said.

That inspiration has led to a pineapple ukulele for which Vinsel has a design patent and a plywood McInnis Bateau — a type of small watercraft — Vinsel calls The Patience, among many other creations.

He is particularly proud of the small boat and his work in advocacy, Vinsel said, and he pointed them out of highlights from his time here.

However, there is one goal Vinsel doubts he will reach before moving away.

“I always wanted to catch a halibut off the fly,” Vinsel said. “I’m not sure that will happen.”

Anderson said helicopter flights with her son to glaciers and separate encounters with brown bears along the Taku River while volunteering for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game changed her artwork.

“After, that, I always had bears in my art,” Anderson said. “Glacier textures changed my art, too.”

Before the move to the Lower 48, Anderson said she has a few things she would like to do. Some are more likely to be realized than others.

One, is making cloth circles for a giant octopus that is being built for the Alaska State Library, Archives and Museum’s children’s area. That’s already a work in progress and a lock to happen.

“I’ve been having a lot of fun at my sewing machine,” Anderson said.

Another is venturing further into the northern part of Alaska and perhaps seeing a polar bear in the wild.

“I have not gotten any farther north than Fairbanks,” Anderson said. “I would love to go as far north as I could go, but that’s not going to happen.”

Looking forward

Despite a deep love for Juneau, Anderson and Vinsel are hoping to be in Washington state at a piece of property Anderson calls Robinsong Ranch by 2020.

Much of the time between now and then will be spent readying their Juneau property for sale and preparing for a move to the state where Anderson was raised.

“It’s a homecoming,” Anderson said. “After my parents died it was like I lost my home. It just called to me.”

While she’ll be getting back to her roots, Anderson’s time in Juneau will be reflected in the landscape.

She has flown with pots of fireweed and planted raspberries on the property, and hopes they will thrive.

“It’s not marijuana, it can travel on the plane,” Anderson said.

While there will be a home base, Vinsel and Anderson don’t plan to stay in one place for long. Anderson envisions traveling around the western United States in a trailer, and traveling by ferry toward nowhere in particular and creating quick sketches is also an appealing thought for Vinsel.

“I’m looking forward to traveling without an itinerary,” Vinsel said.

Cuba, where Vinsel was born on a military base, and Scotland, Anderson’s ancestral origin, are also on the sightseeing to-do list.

Both Vinsel, who paints watercolors, sketches and works with wood, and Anderson, whose work includes oil paintings, etchings, screening and more, intend to continue to create.

Vinsel said he will enjoy having a warmer work space during the winter, so he can continue to make ukuleles, boats and frames for paintings.

“In my retirement, I’ll have a shop with some amount of heat,” he said. “As I get older, it’s harder to work in the cold.”

Similarly, Anderson said as time went by and arthritis crept in, etchings became painful to make, but painting remains pain free.

She’s looking forwarding to painting based on what inspires her brush to move rather than what will make financial sense in Juneau.

“I want to focus on things where I don’t care if they’re bears or glaciers for tourists,” Anderson said. “I’m going to paint some things that are part of my memories. It will be total freedom.”


• Contact arts and culture reporter Ben Hohenstatt at (907)523-2243 or bhohenstatt@juneauempire.com.


This scan of a water color by Mark Vinsel is a self-portrait based on a photo taken by one of Vinsel’s friends. Vinsel and his wife, Dianne Anderson, are planning a retirement from Juneau Artists Gallery and a move to Washington state. (Courtesy photo | Mark Vinsel)

This scan of a water color by Mark Vinsel is a self-portrait based on a photo taken by one of Vinsel’s friends. Vinsel and his wife, Dianne Anderson, are planning a retirement from Juneau Artists Gallery and a move to Washington state. (Courtesy photo | Mark Vinsel)

Dianne Anderson paints a picture of a cat. The Juneau artist, who sometimes creates commissioned pieces of pets, has lived, taught and painted in Juneau since the mid-1980s, however, she is planning to retire from the professional arts community and move to Washington by 2020. (Courtesy Photo | Mark Vinsel)

Dianne Anderson paints a picture of a cat. The Juneau artist, who sometimes creates commissioned pieces of pets, has lived, taught and painted in Juneau since the mid-1980s, however, she is planning to retire from the professional arts community and move to Washington by 2020. (Courtesy Photo | Mark Vinsel)

“Mendenhall Night Magic” by Dianne Anderson illustrates the glacier textures and Alaskan wildlife that have become part of her artwork. Anderson said she is looking forward to painting other sorts of scenes once she retires as a professional artist in Juneau. (Courtesy Photo | Dianne Anderson)

“Mendenhall Night Magic” by Dianne Anderson illustrates the glacier textures and Alaskan wildlife that have become part of her artwork. Anderson said she is looking forward to painting other sorts of scenes once she retires as a professional artist in Juneau. (Courtesy Photo | Dianne Anderson)

Mark Vinsel, treasurer for Juneau Artists Gallery, is planning to retire from the group in 2019, and a move to Washington state with his wife, Dianne Anderson, looms. (Courtesy Photo | Mark Vinsel)

Mark Vinsel, treasurer for Juneau Artists Gallery, is planning to retire from the group in 2019, and a move to Washington state with his wife, Dianne Anderson, looms. (Courtesy Photo | Mark Vinsel)

Mark Vinsel has a design patent for this pineapple ukulele. Vinsel said he was inspired to make the instrument by the good wood in Southeast Alaska. (Courtesy Photo | Mark Vinsel)

Mark Vinsel has a design patent for this pineapple ukulele. Vinsel said he was inspired to make the instrument by the good wood in Southeast Alaska. (Courtesy Photo | Mark Vinsel)

More in Home

Jörg Knorr, a solo travel journalist from Flensburg, Germany, smiles after taking a photo on Sunday, May 11, 2025. (Jasz Garrett / Juneau Empire)
German kayaker sets off to circumnavigate Admiralty Island

He made friends along the way in his mission to see Alaska.

Phase One of the HESCO barriers ends in the backyard of this residence on Rivercourt Way on Monday, May 12, 2025. The next extension, Phase One A, will install the barriers along the river adjacent to Dimond Park from the end of Rivercourt Way, interconnecting through a gap in the back fence. (Jasz Garrett / Juneau Empire)
Juneau Assembly approves extending HESCO barriers

After reviewing flood-fighting inundation maps, additional short-term mitigation deemed necessary.

House Majority Leader Chuck Kopp (R-Anchorage), right, presents an overview of a bill reviving pensions for public employees during a House floor session Monday, May 12, 2025. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
House passes bill reviving pensions for public employees, Senate expected to consider it next year

Supporters say it avoids pitfalls in previous system nixed in 2006 due to multibillion-dollar shortfall.

A cruise ship docks in downtown Juneau on April 30, 2025. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
As foreign tourists stay away, US could lose $12.5 billion this year, tourism group says

Border detentions, confusion over visas deterring visitors, according to World Travel & Tourism Council.

Members of the Alaska Senate watch the votes for and against Senate Bill 26 on Monday, May 12, 2025, in Juneau. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska senators vote to end daylight saving time, ask feds to put state on Pacific Standard Time

Alaska would be on the same time zone as Seattle for four months of the year is bill becomes law.

Axel Baumann films and Max Osadchenko captures sounds of Juneau Alaska Music Matters students performing a “Gratitude” concert at the Sealaska Heritage Institute Clan House on Thursday, May 8, 2025. The event was a wrapup performance after the film crew followed JAMM participants for two weeks as part of a feature-length documentary. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Filmmakers seek to share cultural lessons of Juneau Alaska Music Matters with a wider audience

Crew spends two weeks with students after following similar program in Texas for full-length documentary.

In this file photo Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé freshman Bella Connally, Ketchikan senior Clara Odden and Sitka junior Adalyna Moore race to the finish of the 4x100 relay during the Capital City Invitational Track & Field Meet in Juneau on April 26. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire file photo)
JDHS track team rises in the rain to challenge at Sitka

Crimson Bears compete with defending state champs Wolves.

State Sen. Forrest Dunbar (D-Anchorage) speaks during a candlelight vigil Wednesday at the Alaska State Capitol by participants calling upon federal lawmakers not to cut Medicaid funding (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Proposed Medicaid cuts in Alaska: A protest, a Senate resolution and where things currently stand

Some Republicans in D.C. balk at full $880B reduction; work requirements, other trims still in play.

Republicans have toiled under House Speaker Mike Johnson to find $880 billion in savings over a decade and assemble a number of cuts large enough to meet that goal. (Tierney L. Cross / For The New York Times)
Republicans propose paring Medicaid coverage, but steer clear of deeper cuts

House panel’s plan would still leave millions without health coverage or facing higher costs.

Most Read