Jeepers Creepers
This Spooky season, Green Door Art Gallery invites you to step into a world where art meets enchantment. Jeepers Creepers transforms the gallery into a playful cabinet of curiosities—filled with works that shimmer with mystery, lean into shadow, and delight in the unexpected.
Every piece has a story, every corner a surprise. Whether you’re drawn to haunting beauty, mischievous detail, or a touch of seasonal magic, this show invites you to wander, wonder, and let the art cast its spell.
Visit the Exhibit
🗓️ Now through October 31
📍 Green Door Art Gallery
21 N. Gore Ave.
Webster Groves, MO 63119
⏰ Gallery Hours:
Wednesday–Sunday, 10 AM – 5 PM
✨ Opening Reception✨
Friday, October 3, 5–8 PM
Meet the artists, enjoy seasonal treats, and come dressed in costume if you dare.
Costumes encouraged.
Magic guaranteed.




Maxine Thirteen
Maxine Thirteen is a figurative painter currently residing in St. Louis, Missouri. Her oil paintings focus on portraiture and utilize inspiration from vintage photos and advertisements, old films, and pin-ups to express commentaries on femininity, social satire, and introspection. Her paintings often incorporate macabre or unusual elements into glamorous imagery to simultaneously entice and disturb the viewer.
The name Maxine Thirteen combines her old soul, vintage interests (the name Maxine was most popular between 1915-1930) and her fascination with the macabre, othering, fear, fantastical superstitions and basically all things creepy. Maxine embraces both of these directions in her art.




Jackie Rabbit
Jackie Rabbit is a visual artist originally from San Francisco. A tattoo artist by trade, she also works in acrylic paint, pen and ink, and colored pencil. She draws most of her inspiration either from nature and ecological issues or from her dreams and experiences. These things become intertwined in her work to create dark fantasies that tell the story of her inner life and traumas. Through this approach, she aims to create pieces that resonate on both a personal and universal level, inviting viewers to reflect on their own inner landscapes.




Michael Frank
Michael Frank has been painting for over 40 years. Because of his attention to detail, coloring and strong direction of light, he transports his viewers into an enchanted time and place. He has developed a series of fantasy paintings where the imagery comes from his imagination. These depict nature with birds, turtles, toadstools and even fish against a mysterious fairy tale like setting of forest brooks and waterfalls.
“I Love to create. Creating paintings gives me a way to show off my imagination without depending on others. It also gives me the power to touch someone. To bring back fond memories. To make people aware of their beautiful surroundings. To alter a mood. To dramatize the quest for survival or happiness. I often portray many of our world’s magnificent creatures in their natural surroundings. I do my best to glorify them. To warm our hearts to them and be thankful for their creation.”



Nancy Exarhu
I am an artist who has a painting diploma from the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence Italy, an MFA in printmaking from Washington University and I have studied ceramics at SLCC / Meramec.
I have taught printmaking, paper making, painting, book making at the St. Louis Art Museum, Craft Alliance, Laumeier Sculpture Park, local high schools and I have given many workshops as a visiting artist in St. Louis, Greece, France, Italy.
My ceramics are sold at the shop of Craft Alliance, the shop at the Contemporary Art Museum and the Union Studio boutique in Webster Groves.
I was born and raised in Thessaloniki, Greece. Since I took a pencil in my hand I have been
drawing and writing. I fell in love with Florence, Italy where I decided to go there and study
painting. I made St. Louis my home town of choice, where I have taught Art and had many shows.


Tate Skinner
Tate Skinner is an artist from Chesterfield, Missouri. He received his BFA from Illinois State University in 2022. His work focuses primarily on the built environment of 21st century suburbia and abstract digital
creations. Spending countless nights recording traffic, he depicts the “futuristic” landscape that was envisioned for our future in the mid 1900s as something much darker. Cheap suburban developments cut and paste the same structures, creating spaces that feel desolate.
Spaces designed for modern commerce in the day become empty and liminal by the fall of night. These spaces feel hostile because they were designed to be. The darkness just highlights how strange they are with nothing but the endless glow of lights in the distance.








Laurie Smith
Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Laurie M. Smith. I am self-taught and have been making beaded jewelry for over thirty years. My first experience with beads was at the age of four, and I have been passionate for beading ever since. My inspiration comes from the rich colors that mother nature gives us. Semi-Precious stones, Swarovski crystal, glass, wood and shell are just some of the types of beads that I work with. Several different beading techniques are used when making this type of jewelry. My work has been in several stores and boutiques, since the early 1990s. It brings me great joy when the jewelry I make, gives the person wearing it, the feeling of confidence in their fashion statement.