Nina Fuller is a Maine photographer whose luminous, textured images of farm life, animals, and rural landscape reveal the quiet beauty hidden in everyday motion. With a career spanning more than fifty years and clients ranging from L.L. Bean and National Geographic Traveler to The New York Times, Nina Fuller has spent a lifetime looking for the moment when chaos becomes stillness and the ordinary becomes extraordinary.
Based on a sheep farm in Hollis, Maine, she has expanded her practice far beyond commercial photography — earning a master's in Counseling Psychology and developing a unique model of Equine Assisted Photography Therapy that uses image-making as a gateway to healing. Represented by Portland Art Gallery, Nina Fuller creates photographs that feel timeless, grounded, and alive with layered meaning.
What does it look like when a five-decade career in photography turns inward — and how does a sheep farm in Maine become the center of a practice devoted to both art and healing?
