FOR A GOOD CAUSE -- Carole Akins
-- Story by Mathis Winkler; photo by Don Leach
Carole Akins has always had dogs in her life. The first one she bought
was Lucy, a funny little number with fuzzy red hair.
When the 50-year-old Lido Isle resident gave up interior designing
nine years ago to devote her life to painting, her barking companions
took over the canvas.
“It’s easy for me to paint dogs,” Akins said during a conversation in
her gallery on 31st Street, where she’s currently exhibiting her recent
work. “Much easier than anything else. I like their companionship. They
are kind of watching us, but you don’t know what they’re thinking.”
During a walk, Akins stumbled across a lost service dog for Canine
Companions, an organization that trains man’s best friend to assist
people with disabilities other than blindness. It was then that she
realized that she’d found her good cause.
“I decided that that was going to be my charity,” she said, adding
that part of the proceeds from sales of her paintings will benefit the
organization. “That this was something I was going to be committed to.
Personal freedom is one of the recurring themes in my paintings. And the
philosophy of Canine Companions is in keeping with it.”
The charity, which has a regional office in Oceanside, places dogs
with so-called “puppy raisers” that train them for 18 months. Once the
dogs are socialized and have learned up to 50 commands, Canine Companions
matches them with disabled people who need assistance.
In a training program lasting two to three weeks, dogs and humans grow
together as a team.
It costs between $20,000 and $30,000 to train and support the dogs
during their lifetime, said Yvonee Clothier, a spokeswoman for the
organization. She added that currently one dog receives training in
Newport Beach, while another one is placed with a disabled person in
Costa Mesa.
Back at the art gallery, Akin’s love for dogs is evident. Most of the
paintings --- depicting scenes at French street cafes, a lazy Sunday
morning in bed or a shopping spree at a Santa Barbara shoe store in
vibrant colors -- include at least one of her furry friends.
“They kind of appear in the underpainting,” she said, pointing to a
painting with several dogs holding their own “dinner conversation” under
a table. “They present themselves to me.”
Akins’ 11-year-old Welsh corgi, Winnie, didn’t model for any of the
paintings in her current show. Many of the dogs in her works come from
mental or photographic snapshots Akins takes on trips, she said.
FYI
For more information on Canine Companions, call (760) 754-3300 or log
on to o7 www.caninecompanions.orgf7
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