Margo is joined by Ashley Lohr, an artist, educator, and community builder based in Petersburg, Alaska—a small fishing island town where she has taught art for nearly two decades. Working across painting and enamel jewelry, Ashley has built a creative life rooted in place, curiosity, and long-term commitment. From sustaining robust school art programs to teaching workshops far beyond the classroom, her path is a testament to what can unfold when artists design lives that support both their work and their values.
Ashley shares how moving to Alaska at 23 shaped her identity as both a teacher and artist, how she continues to grow her own practice alongside full-time teaching, and what she learned from intentionally stepping away during a self-created sabbatical.
In this conversation, we discuss:
- Moving to Petersburg, Alaska for a teaching job—and how place can deeply shape creative alignment
- Teaching art in ways that feel authentic, expansive, and student-centered
- How Ashley builds, sustains, and evolves art programs within a school setting
- Maintaining a personal art practice alongside full-time teaching and family life
- Taking a self-designed sabbatical and what it revealed about community, creativity, and pace
- Teaching outside the classroom: workshops, travel, and non-gallery ways to share work
- Finding and proposing workshop opportunities—locally and farther afield
- Trusting a slow, steady creative path and allowing your work to change over time
Connect with Ashley:
- Website: https://ashleylohrart.com
- Instagram: https://instagram.com/ashleylohrart
