Joseph Craig English

[4] Subsequently, and since 1972,[4] he has been showing and selling his artwork at outdoor arts festivals throughout the country[5][6] as well as regional exhibitions.

[7] In focusing his art on the scenes around his region and the capital area, the artist has been described as "local color adopts new meaning with this celebrated DC-area printmaker.

Though his streetscapes now include places in Richmond, New York, North Carolina and California,[9] the artist has become associated with the Greater Washington capital region via hundreds of silkscreens of familiar sights to Washingtonians.

[1] His work was described in a 2013 show at the Betty Mae Kramer Gallery in Silver Spring, MD as "a bold and beautiful display of artworks that explore community–here in Montgomery County..."[11] Curator Dr. Michele Cohen noted about his work:English directs our attention to the play of light and shadow, leaf patterns, and architectural ornaments that might go unnoticed.

It is also included in the public collections of the City of Baltimore, DC Commission of the Arts, Georgetown University, IBM, Microsoft, U.S. State Department, Montgomery County, MD, The Washington Post, Xerox and others.