Art Heals the Mind, Body and Soul

Name/Title

Art Heals the Mind, Body and Soul

Entry/Object ID

2022.2

Description

This mixed media portrait by Folk artist Mary L. Proctor utilizes wood and paintbrushes to create the composition. The figure embodies artmaking while seemingly painting the portrait we’re looking at. The figure leans back elegantly with her head tilted towards the sky. In her right hand, she holds a brush up to the edge of the frame, as if she is painting the white and yellow flowers surrounding her. Her left hand holds a heart with “love” written inside, while “art heals the body mind and soul” is written within the frame next to the figure, emphasizing the love Proctor has for art. Proctor layered brushes of different sizes and shapes, and painted in shades of blue and yellow to create the figure’s clothing and shoes. For Proctor, putting together items that are unwanted or broken represents the process of mending.

Artwork Details

Medium

plywood, paint, paintbrushes

Collection

Southern Vernacular Art Collection

Acquisition

Accession

2022.2

Source or Donor

Mary L. Proctor

Acquisition Method

Purchase

Credit Line

Museum Purchase made possible by a contribution from Laura and David Harris

Made/Created

Artist Information

Artist

Proctor, Mary L.

Role

Artist

Date made

2020

Dimensions

Height

53 in

Width

29-1/2 in

Depth

1-1/4 in

Interpretative Labels

Label

Mary L. Proctor (b.1960) Born to a teenage mother in Jefferson County, Florida in 1960, Mary Proctor was raised by her grandparents. Like many vernacular and self-taught artists, she can pinpoint the exact moment and reason why she began to paint. In 1994, a fire took the lives of her grandmother, aunt, and uncle. Deeply depressed by her great loss, Proctor found comfort in her Christian faith, and in 1995, Proctor had a vision that told her to get a door and paint. From that day forward, Proctor has taken it upon herself to be a missionary to the world, using doors as passageways to freedom, peace, and comfort, and instilling her paintings with passages from scripture, and glittering angels. She calls herself "Missionary Mary" and uses a myriad of found materials - buttons, sticks, broken pieces of glass, mirrors, plates - to complete her compositions. For Mary, putting together items that are unwanted or broken represents the process of mending.

Created By

admin@catalogit.app

Create Date

February 17, 2022