One
after another, through our travels and my writing and this blog, we continue to
connect with people with whom we otherwise would not. I never know when the
next encounter is coming. Sometimes I never even meet the person.
In
July 2013, I took a picture of Del Viento in Alaska. Shortly afterward, Karen
Larson, founder and editor of Good Old Boat magazine, bought my picture for the
September 2014 cover. Then something else happened to the photo,
something much cooler.
A
couple weeks ago, I received here in Mexico a holiday card-sized envelope from Good
Old Boat. I opened it up. A note from Karen fell out.
“Michael—you
just had to have this…painted by one
of our subscribers who is incarcerated.”
I
removed the carefully packed painting from the envelope and my jaw dropped
open. Before me, on cardstock that measures about 8-inches by 5-inches, was a
stunning, extremely detailed watercolor rendering of the photo. I was touched
and amazed to receive this image of our boat and family in a magical Alaskan
anchorage, from my eye to my camera to a magazine and into a prison where it
was rendered and then emerged as a work of art from behind those walls to
finally reach our boat near the bottom of the Baja peninsula.
According
to a story Karen wrote about the artist even before the photo was published,
he is a former U.S. Coast Guardsman who began painting in prison, using the
covers of the Good Old Boat issues he received in his subscription. He sends
her paintings each month as he works through back issues.
I
got his contact info and sent a thank you note.
--MR
Wow that's beautiful!! What a treasure :)
ReplyDeleteA friend of the family did a painting of Brio as a surprise for us... but it's about 4' x 5'. So I tell Jon "Brio II" has to be big enough that we can mount the painting of Brio I somewhere ;)
Very cool story!