Noah Saterstrom
Noah Saterstrom was raised in Mississippi and educated in the University of Mississippi’s Department of Art (BFA) and at Scotland’s Glasgow School of Art. His paintings and drawings are in public and private collections worldwide. They have recently been exhibited at Carol Robinson Gallery in New Orleans, Louisiana; Fischer Galleries in Ridgeland, Mississippi; and Julia Martin Gallery in Nashville, Tennessee, among other venues in North Carolina, New York, Washington, and Arizona. Saterstrom has held residencies at HRH Prince Charles’s Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh, Scotland; Morris and Spottiswood in Glasgow, Scotland; the Virginia Center for Creative Arts in Amherst, Virginia; and Exploded View Microcinema in Tucson, Arizona. Saterstrom’s work has been covered in The Wall Street Journal, and he was formerly a regular contributor to Nashville Arts Magazine. His painting Maeve is the cover of Ann Patchett’s book The Dutch House. Another work, Road to Shubuta, was included in the Mississippi Museum of Art’s 2018 exhibition Picturing Mississippi and later acquired by the Museum. His work What Became of Dr. Smith, an immersive narrative painting of 183 canvases, exhibited at the Mississippi Museum of Art from April to September 2024. He lives in Nashville with his wife and three kids.

Noah Saterstrom was raised in Mississippi and educated in the University of Mississippi’s Department of Art (BFA) and at Scotland’s Glasgow School of Art. His paintings and drawings are in public and private collections worldwide. They have recently been exhibited at Carol Robinson Gallery in New Orleans, Louisiana; Fischer Galleries in Ridgeland, Mississippi; and Julia Martin Gallery in Nashville, Tennessee, among other venues in North Carolina, New York, Washington, and Arizona. Saterstrom has held residencies at HRH Prince Charles’s Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh, Scotland; Morris and Spottiswood in Glasgow, Scotland; the Virginia Center for Creative Arts in Amherst, Virginia; and Exploded View Microcinema in Tucson, Arizona. Saterstrom’s work has been covered in The Wall Street Journal, and he was formerly a regular contributor to Nashville Arts Magazine. His painting Maeve is the cover of Ann Patchett’s book The Dutch House. Another work, Road to Shubuta, was included in the Mississippi Museum of Art’s 2018 exhibition Picturing Mississippi and later acquired by the Museum. His work What Became of Dr. Smith, an immersive narrative painting of 183 canvases, exhibited at the Mississippi Museum of Art from April to September 2024. He lives in Nashville with his wife and three kids.