The Tyler Chronicle Winter, 2022 Worldwide Edition Tyler Chronicle ArtMoore Art Gallery Celebrates Creativity"Give one child a hammer and he will build a house; give another child a hammer and he will tear it down. Like it or not, this is a basic fact of human nature."
The difference in these cases is creative genius; that little understood and very rare quality of certain individuals which allows them-- NO, it compels them to produce order from chaos and beauty from the commonplace. Like art and beauty, genius is not an easy word to define. We won't try. Ironically, the Moore Art Gallery website is devoted to these indefinables. Specifically it is devoted to the surviving paintings of Bobby Dean Moore, his life, and his boundless love of beauty. It is dedicated to the memory of his mother, Mary Alma Moore and to all who are lovers of beauty. Even at the age of three, Bobby's artistic bent was showing itself. He baked mud pies which he had sculpted into the shape of roasted ducks and turkeys. He laid out intricate designs on his mother's kitchen table from freshly cut carrot slices and he decorated tiny Christmas trees made from evergreen twigs. Bobby spent 12 happy years as a student at Whitehouse Public School. Bobby's compulsion from early on was to paint not only what he saw, but what he felt. "I am not a highly disciplined painter; I paint what I feel. If I'm happy, I paint happy scenes with bright colors. And when I am dejected or sad, the paintings show it," he said During the twelfth and thirteenth years of his life the young artist painted hundreds of canvases. Most of them were vibrant scenes from the woodland trails and streams where he spent his childhood and early adolescence. "This was the most productive time of my life artistically. It was a time of complete freedom, innocence and joy. And the paintings showed it." Later, in an effort to help ease the financial burden of grinding poverty he painted signs, murals, an occasional landscape and while still in high school he worked for a family enterprise painting wild roses on handmade wooden doll furniture. Some complete sets of this furniture still exist and are now sought after as collector's items. With few exceptions the entire lifetime collection of Bobby's paintings were stored in the little house in the woods where he had grown up. The house mysteriously burned on the cold winter night of January 19, 1985. His 86 year old mother burned to death in the fire trying to save the paintings. You may visit Moore Art Gallery by clicking this link. It features paintings by unknowns, local artists...and the masters. For more information on Moore Art Gallery, phone Curator at 903-707-6258. ___________________________________New Jersey Artist Spreads Joy by MailTyler Chronicle Special Passaic, New Jersey Sitting in her apartment on the twelfth floor of a Passaic, New Jersey apartment, Joan Kain spreads good will and happiness in a most unusual way. She decorates the envelopes of letters which she mails to her many friends across America and around the world. No high tech needed here! Her materials are simple; clean, white envelopes, and a fistfull of colored ink pens. The art she creates with these simple tools is colorful and inspiring. And Joan has been displaying her talents since early childhood. Even as a very young child Joan enjoyed time to herself with her colors. She also writes, and has illustrated some of her original stories.Joan assists elderly folks in her apartment building and baby sits for extra income. She has two pet cats and is a voracious reader. We will feature more of Joan Kain's delightful art work on this, our new Chronicle Art Page. ___________________________________ |