STEVE ROGERS has loved boats and water all his life. Not only does he paint boats, he builds them as well in ship model form. He is a nationally recognized ship model builder, has written five books on the subject, and won a certificate of commendation at the 2000 Modelbuilders Competition at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, Virginia. Steve is also a signature member of the American Society of Marine Artists. Although model building and fine art would seem unrelated, each supports and enhances the other. Understanding construction methods, thinking in three dimensions, and working from blueprints and photographs allows Steve to visualize the boats and ships that become the subjects of his paintings. He works primarily in acrylics and paints traditional working craft. These are not pampered fiberglass yachts, but hard-bitten and overworked oystermen, crabbers, and menhaden steamers. His paintings capture the toughness and durability of everyday working boats and the sheer beauty and stark terror of the weather and waters they work in. Steve is the recipient of the 2005 Established Artist Fellowship from the Delaware Division of the Arts. He is represented by the Peninsula Gallery in Lewes, Delaware, and the Art of the Sea Gallery in South Thomaston, Maine, as well as the Gallery 1683 in Annapolis, Maryland. Although most of his models are in the hands of private collectors, several pieces are in local museums, including the St. Clements Island Potomac River Museum and the Havre de Grace Decoy Museum.