The art of memory
Young Chang
Lynn Welker remembers one painting she did a couple years ago.
She started out meaning to create an abstract work but ended up
depicting, in an abstract way, Ohio farmland.
The professional Newport Beach artist didn’t grow up on farms, but she
grew up close enough to them in Ohio that she’d inevitably go to and
drive by the fields.
“I like to have the painting take me where it goes,” Welker said. “I
know, in many cases, the end result will include things from my
background, my childhood.”
Artists showcased at next week’s “Orange County Artists Showcase
2002,” hosted by the Costa Mesa Senior Center and Orange Coast College
for the fourth year, agree.
More than 190 pieces of art created by people older than 50 will line
the walls of the Senior Center for a weekend. Chosen from more than 2,000
entries in a juried competition held last Monday, the works are products
of Orange County seniors, most of whom are from Newport Beach, Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa.
Part of the exhibit will feature a traveling collection, coordinated
with the Orange County chapter of the Alzheimer’s Assn., called “Memories
in the Making.”
The artwork in this section was done by Alzheimer’s patients from
throughout the county, most of whom have passed on.
“Memories in the making is a method we use to process with nonverbal
individuals using symbols,” said Ladoris “Sam” Heinly, coordinator for
the collection. “Art helps trigger memories for them and acts as a
reminiscent tool . . . and helps them tap into those past memories.”
Heinly added that Alzheimer’s patients have frequently used art to
communicate with others about their childhood, their families, pets and
children.
Art also helps healthy seniors -- and people in general -- remember
past times and stories, local artists and senior experts confirm.
When asked about art and memory, Welker laughed at first and said not
all senior artists are so old that they need artistic stimulants to
remember things. But much the way writing and other creative processes
jog the memory, the professional agreed that art can cause people to
remember.
“And I don’t think an artist can really do visual, fine art work
without drawing from their past,” she said.
Sheryl Lowes, a public health nurse at the Senior Center, added that
she’s read research that proves exercising the mind, be it through
crossword puzzles or artistic endeavors, helps cause positive emotions
and stimulates the brain.
Referring to the seniors at the Center who take watercolor and other
art classes, Lowes added, “It brings back memories because the long-term
memory is still intact. It’s the short-term memory that begins to decline
as we age.”
The process of creating art also makes memories.
Joy Escoe, a Costa Mesa resident and amateur artist whose three
paintings will be hung at the Center as part of the show, takes
photographs of people and places and then paints what she’s shot. In her
artistic way, she leaves behind little legacies on canvas.
“It’s a document, I’m telling something about myself in these
paintings,” Escoe said.
Her favorite scenes are of mountains and everything that surrounds
them -- the snow, the skies, the trees and even the smells.
“I like to be buried in the mountains. I really love them and I feel
the best there,” she said. “My favorite things to paint are mountain and
snow scenes. Somehow, I think in a previous life I lived in the
mountains.”
Escoe’s three pieces in the show are “Wisteria,” which depicts a
French Alps scene; “A Dutch Garden”; and “Buck’s Pond,” which refers to
the pond her landscaper son Buck built in the back of his house.
“When I first started showing my paintings, I thought ‘Gee, I hope
that when I pass on, that my family wants it,”’ the painter said. “I have
friends and relatives who have paintings of mine. It’s nice to be
rewarded with some approval.”
FYI
WHAT: “Orange County Artists Showcase 2002”
WHEN: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. March 8 and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 9 and 10
WHERE: Costa Mesa Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa
COST: $2.50
CALL: (949) 645-2356
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