Monday, May 2, 2016

[Now it's Readable!] Very Large Painting! My Mom Painted HER Mom! [Long] Title [Yes, by My Mom!]: "My Mother, Gentle as a Butterfly - She Loved to Pick Wildflowers from the Cracks in the Sidewalks"

My dear Mom had this huge acrylic painting hung at her graduation display. At that time, neither she nor I had the money to get it properly stretched, on frames, for hanging. Looking back,it makes me feel sad that she had to show such a GREAT painting with the edges unfinished.



Still, it was a tremendous time of joy and celebration though – I was so, SO proud of her and happy for her!! She had worked so hard, and had sacrificed much, to take on a BA degree in Studio Arts – especially as a low income, senior citizen (who had to do things like haul her art projects [much of the time] back and forth on the city bus [even in the Minnesota winters], walk with a cane at times, etc). She underwent the whole “starving artists” thing sometimes too. Plus, here was a woman, a mother, a grandmother – who had already suffered one bout of cancer and well-survived it; had been in a car accident; was hit as a pedestrian 3 times; survived a very bad, long term marriage to an abusive man who had (unbeknownst to her) cheated on her (a dedicated, stay-at-home wife and mother) for 15 years with two other women (and so wasn't home much to help her raise us four children [and who only delved my Mom out a sparse budget to provide for us with]); had suffered a life-threatening birth experience, with her little baby girl (Mary Jo) only surviving one precious day; and suffered the loss of her beloved son, my brother Jerry, a lovely singer, at age 17, in a car crash. All this and more. (Suffice it to say that it is hard to be a smart, righteousness-loving woman in a largely stupid, cruel, and wicked world.) I came to regard my Mom as a kind of female Job. [And as time went on, she suffered MORE, especially physically – she suffered breast cancer and survived it; had a scary skin cancer incident; had a stroke, WHICH LEFT HER BLIND (and additionally impaired) – and then, in short order after that, had a heart attack, more strokes, and lung cancer (which did her in).]



Despite all of that though, my Mom came through it a joyous person – with a mind-blowing sense of HUMOR!!! Even as she was slipping away, and could no longer speak, I said something, and she would raise her finger, and make a knowing, funny face – like she was making a joke! Okay – as a sample, before that, after she had had a stroke, and was sitting there, an artist, tragically newly-blinded, on a bed, as a doctor was explaining her stroke to us, my Mom interjected this: “I just want to know one thing. IS HE [the doctor] CUTE?”



She had also lost another child (my younger sister), to a car accident, in 2012. That, too, was devastatingly heart-breaking for her.



Still, I can't describe this wonderful woman well enough, but she was amazingly optimistic; loving; spiritual; thoughtful; empathetic; caring; hospitable; kind; compassionate; passionate and intense about whatever cool thing she was doing; exuberant; zealous; grateful; intelligent; wise; possessing of a love for justice, righteousness, and truth; very “aware”; very giving; and very encouraging to others! (She'd reach out to be friendly and helpful to strangers, as she could. It was just in her.)



What else can I even start to say here? She was a STELLAR, AWESOME mother, for a googleplex number of reasons – including for her always being such a strongly supportive advocate for each of us. (She was like a mother lion, like good mothers are – but I will be forever grateful to her for that!) I know she sacrificed for us kids - maybe too much. I will owe her, forever. (And I will be so happy to have the chance to work repayment to her, someday, hopefully starting soon, in a new paradise earth here, after Jah resurrects loved ones back to life here...)



What else, to tell here now? She grew up starting in 1936, just after The Great Depression; and she lived through WWII (watching terrible news reels regarding that at a local theater; dealing with rations; wearing badly fitting bloomers, because rubber for elastic went to the war effort; etc.). She was one of eight brothers and sisters, and she worked very hard, as a child, to help care for her younger siblings. (Her own mom had to devote a lot of time to the youngest, who was born with Down's Syndrome.) She went to a parochial school, which resulted in  some very negative experiences for her. Her dad (Edward Kennedy Delaney) was a lawyer, judge, and a Mayor of St. Paul, Minnesota. (So, for those years, she grew up in the public eye.) She grew up in St. Paul, on Portland Avenue; and her parents also had a farm, with horses, out in White Bear Lake. (There, when I was a teenager, my Mom grew a big vegetable garden – and I got to pull a LOT of weeds. At 16, I had more romantic ideas. It was probably a good thing that she had me pull weeds instead.)



What else? She could run like a bandit! She was a softball coach for myself and peers, for years. She played softball herself, and could crack a softball and run for bases at age 50. While she could, she loved to bowl! She sewed clothes for us; and costumes for me, for Jr. High music/dance/theater endeavors; and more. She herself dabbled in jazz dance, piano, guitar, and lots of crafting. (She would take us kids out into woods to collect pine cones, and to a lake to search for driftwood. Those were beautiful, fresh-air, building appreciation-for-nature times. Then, she made some decorations of pine cone owls, with plastic eyes, sitting on top of artful driftwood log pieces.



And cooking. Wow!! She was my first and main inspiration for this, for sure (I am a chef now.) During the 70's recession, she took her [way too low of a given] “budget” and fed us well, making just about everything from scratch. (Even when I was in very young, like in kindergarten, though, I remember her making homemade noodles, and cleverly hanging them everywhere to dry!). So I learned how to cook, creatively, from my Mom!! She was big on spaghetti! She would let it simmer for a long time. At her funeral, about 5 people, including some who were little neighbor boys then, praised her spaghetti sauce, saying they could smell it, and so tried to hang around then, to have a plateful.



But the years went by, and my Mom's love of cooking and baking (and opportunities to obtain ingredients) flourished. I found that we both had a love of cookbooks and magazines, specialty kitchen items, etc. We enjoyed watching the Cooking Channel together at her house. She had always generously baked cookies, etc., for others. She volunteered to make chili, etc. at a local recreation center. She made Chateau Briand for my high school French Club, out of the goodness of her heart. She had joined a St. Paul Bread Bakers club, which donated food, as I understand. (During the recession years, she was part of a U of M Extension Service Homemakers Club also, and so would help teach cooking and baking to other homemakers.) She worked some short stints at a grocery bakery; and (even shorter), at a hotel restaurant; but was basically one fantastic home cook, making meals for family, friends, and relatives that were unforgettable. What else though, with this cooking and baking bit? The woman won so many Minnesota State Fair ribbons for baking (and also art, horticulture, and floral arrangements) that I have two bags full of them. I am trying to figure how to display them! (She also had a bit written about her in a book a woman wrote about pie-baking contestants, and also a Minnesota State Fair recipe book. [I can find the names of these book, and note them later.]



She was a Master Gardener too, and made herself available to answer people's gardening questions. Personally, she had a goal to form her yard to be, color-wise, like a work of "impressionism" – like Monet's Garden. After we lost her, one neighbor remarked that is what her yard looked like. If I needed some chervil or chocolate mint, Mom had it. I could hardly leave her house, without being given a bagful of garden stuff, home-canned goods, and/or a bouquet of flowers, which my Mom always so eagerly wanted me to have. (My Mom also loved getting to participate in the "Art in Bloom" contests at the Minneapolis Institute of Art in the springtime - wherein artists create floral arrangements to reflect and/or complement various paintings on display there.)



So anyway, there stood my Mom, at her graduation display, at the Fine Art Gallery of the University of Minnesota, happy as a lark, all smiles, having conquered everything, to receive not just her Art Degree, but one with flying colors – the coveted BFA degree, a Bachelor of Fine Arts, in Studio Arts. (I also have more background stories to share later, regarding what my mother went through, in her journey [with an added struggle] to obtain this – one piece of which was written by herself.)



Featured on the walls of her display were large, lovingly-made sketches/watercolors – of mostly her grandchildren. The big 20” brass bowl (with the sculpted grapes and leaves on the bottom-side of it), which she made in foundry arts, was sitting there, gleaming too, as were some of her pieces of pottery work. But then, hanging up on the side, was this giant, brightly-colored painting. (She was asked to make a large-sized work.) It was full of the sky, flowers, a pathway leading up and beyond the horizon – and had a little portrait of my grandmother, her Mom (who had passed away), towards the bottom, excitedly showing the viewer the little bunch of wildflowers she found, growing out of the cracks in the sidewalk!!



My Mom wanted a photo of her and I by this painting she made. “Come on, Teri!”, she called. “It's a 3-generation picture!” I gulped – it was of her; myself; and her Mom, in the picture. Three woman who kept going, largely by being joyful and thankful for blessings found along the way of our often difficult paths – and gaining hope and strength from them, namely, from the Creator and giver of all good things, of “every perfect present.” (James 1:17)



After loving every shared moment of my Mom's art-victory celebration, I had to leave. But I went out in my car, turned on a song that included a lyric of “along that stoney path”, and completely broke down in tears. She was such a GREAT, wonderful mother; she had been through SO much Sheol, so many more-than-hard times – but she had dreamed of this accomplishment (and even the works therein), she wanted this, she worked so hard for and sacrificed for this, and SHE DID IT, SHE ABSOLUTELY DID IT.



…...I found this painting, rolled up and slumped over, in a bucket, in the corner of my Mom's basement. I brought it, as it was, to a studio in town, and the very nice photographer hung it up by clips, and photographed it for me, free of charge. I made a poster of it, and hung that in my Mom's hospice room; and then also shared that poster at her funeral (and on her funeral folders and cards [along with the garden trellis she made, by hand-rolling metal, that you see in the background of this page]).



After my Mom died, it turned out that she had left me a little bit of money. I knew what I had to do. I brought the canvas to Nash Frame Design, in Minneapolis, who stretched it. Words cannot describe the deep, overwhelming feeling that came after a man from that studio delivered this piece with his truck, and installed it on my bedroom wall here. It was profoundly joyful, but yet devastating, at the same time. In a way, it was a victory in itself.



Now, every day of my life (unless I'm out of town), I wake up surrounded by my Mom's artwork, including this big, wonderful painting. I turn around and see the face of this happy little lady – meant to be my grandma, but, really, exuding the same spirit as my Mom – encouraging me to keep up my same shared way as them: To be someone who notices, appreciates, and is grateful for and joyful over the beautiful things, the blessings around them – even small ones, like delightful, little surprise flowers....I know I raised my own children to be “aware” (and they are definitely each creative and artistic). But then too, I so loved the time when my own grandson - near a homemade and family-decorated little gray sidewalk here – picked up some wild-growing violets, and said, in his then 2-yr-old voice, “Pree f-wowers!” [Pretty flowers.] Pass it on.



(Note: I have some straight-on shots of the unframed canvas (as taken by that nice photographer mentioned); and also some close-up photos I took of the face of my grandma in this picture. My Mom had worked, to paint her, from an old photograph, of when my grandma was younger. I am planning to post those pics at a later time.)





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