Natalie McGuire
Natalie McGuire is a multi-award-winning visual artist and photographer based in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Rooted in a lifelong connection to nature, her work bridges the precision of the lens with the tactile richness of mosaic craft.
McGuire's artistic identity was shaped early — by a grandfather who hand-colored black-and-white film, a well-traveled family who explored America by road, and an aunt who introduced her to theater, Ukrainian Easter eggs, and the night sky. These influences converged into a practice defined by deep observation and a desire to make the viewer feel present within the image. Inspired by Ansel Adams and Bob Ross, she has long been drawn to the drama of the natural world as her primary subject.
She is best known for two signature bodies of work: her infrared black-and-white photography, which renders familiar landscapes in luminous, otherworldly tones, and her Photozaics — a process of her own invention that fuses a photographic print with a hand-crafted mosaic frame, color-matched to the image itself. The result is a work that rewards viewing at every distance, a quality that once earned her an unsolicited compliment from a retired University of Minnesota photography professor who called it a natural-born talent.
McGuire has exhibited extensively across the United States, with recent solo shows including Healing Geometry of Photozaics at the Waseca Art Center (2026) and group exhibitions at the University of Bridgeport's Schelfhaudt Gallery and the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. Her work holds permanent placements at Hudson Hospital, CommonBond's Lumin community, and Emma Norton's Restoring Waters project. She is currently represented by Curator & Co.
