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elcome to the online home of the Provincetown Art Guide. Our full-color annual book is the ultimate guide to the fine arts in Provincetown, Massachusetts.
Pick up a free copy for the best of Provincetown’s galleries, artists, artisans, antiques, museums, theater, and special advertisers at your fingertips.
Created by Long Point Studio, the annual Art Guide is distributed to key locations in Provincetown and throughout Cape Cod.
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Buy the Art Guide |
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| Click on the cover image
below to browse through the
2026 Provincetown Art Guide (and link to our advertisers). 
Oliver Newberry Chaffee, Jr. (American,1881-1944) Provincetown Dunes, Portrait of Ada Gilmore
c. 1920, watercolor on paper
Gift of the Helen and Napi Van Dereck Estate, 2025
Courtesy of Provincetown Art Association and Museum
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FOLLOW US

RATES & SPECS
for the 2027 edition are available by emailing the publisher at patricia@provincetownartguide.com
LETTER from the PUBLISHER
The Province Lands, some 7,000 acres of dunes, salt marshes, pitch pine forests, and freshwater ponds, is a universe of its own. I have gone there to shed worry, wonder at fleeting deer, drink in the intoxicating scent of bayberry, absorb the twilight glow over sky and dunes, convene with fox, and, on one remarkableoccasion in a downpour, harmonize with thousands of hauled out seals whose mesmerizing collective hum resembled the comforting low frequency of a large singing bowl. Note that I did not mention the coyotes (or coywolves). Their hypnotic howls are not nearly as pleasant when dusk is in freefall miles away from home.
I am far from alone in these sensations. For each person who has spent time on Provincetown's backshore, there are hundreds more impressions. We owe this enormous privilege to year-round Outer Cape residents, civic leaders, environmental and conservation advocates, and artists and writers such as Josephine Del Deo and Ross Moffett, among others, who fought against development. Thanks to them, the National Seashore, created in 1961, has a greater footprint in which visitors can celebrate naked nature without tract housing.
This year Provincetown Art Guide honors the Province Lands through the words of recent visitors and longtime dune dwellers who carry great respect for a landscape shaped by absence as much as presence.
—Patricia Zur
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