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drawings created during lifetime in mental asylum become hit in outsider art worlddrawings created during lifetime in mental asylum become hit in outsider art worlddrawings created during lifetime in mental asylum become hit in outsider art world - draw
by:ITATOUCH
2020-04-14
Roast chicken breast. —
A simple drawing, finished with a pencil on the ledger pager, showing two hats side by side.
One is a variety of top caps, and the other is a long-tailed stocking cap, which is gradually thinner to the side.
The following artist wrote "wo mule".
"Keep an eye on the artist's information at all times.
He couldn't help it because he died in 1987.
But in any case, Edwards's deeds do not appeal to you, nor to the art experts and critics who are now trying to understand his work.
When he was a young man in his 1920 s South Missouri farm, he angrily chased his brother with an axe.
It's already a strange, unruly sort-
Easy to laugh for no reason-
This is a deep annoyance for his stern father, behavior will eventually be diagnosed as crazy and dedicated for life to the national Madhouse
In Nevada, Missouri.
For the next 40 years or so, the deed was trapped in a huge red brick sanctuary with Gothic towers.
Not for money, fame, or vision of the future.
His future is there. he is the only one.
On the ordinary ledger paper, neither side mind the letterhead at the top of the spiritual institution, nor mind the "due balance"
$ "At the bottom ".
Portraits, landscapes, animals with hats.
Some are mysterious subtitles. If a 14-year-
The old boy did not get the drawings from the garbage dump, and no one will talk about Edward's deeds today.
He's not going to be an outsider.
The 283 paintings of this Ozarks farm boy, who loves to hunt squirrels, are drawn at the New York gallery and the Lausanne museum in Switzerland for an exhibition that will not cost $16,000 per page.
"There's a basically discarded person here," says New York art designer Neville Byne, whose husband bought DE on eBay before the artist was recognized.
"His father didn't want him around.
He disappeared into this big Victorian institution.
"His art is now gone in the world, and the voice is finally heard. how moved is it?
"It is not uncommon for Deeds to happen.
Mental institutions and large public hospitals in the early part of the last century had thousands, sometimes for the convenience of families, just like sympathy for patients.
"In those days, the diagnosis was very subjective and anyone could petition the judge," said John emmerrick, director of New Direction behavioral health medicine in Kansas City, Missouri . ".
In the 1950 s, anti-depression drugs and drugs such as libelline, torazine and lithium began to lay the foundation for the development of modern psychiatry.
Today, according to Emerick, people like Deeds are likely to receive medication and outpatient treatment.
The family said that although behavior is likely to be a mental illness, he will not hurt his brother that day.
They told him that he jumped in the River and saved the same brother, Clay, from drowning.
Clay's daughter, Tudi Williams, says her father is full of guilt for the rest of his life.
"My father is a strong man, but sometimes he cries at night and we know it's for Edward," Williams said . ".
What Edward's deeds are really abandoned is a spirit of fantasy;
He likes hunting, fishing, and art, not ploughing, which his father would not accept.
Williams and her sister think Uncle Edward may have autism or ADHD.
Of course, there is nothing to be exiled to the sanctuary for life.
But then electric shock therapy.
ECT, also known as electroshock therapy, in which voltage enough to cause seizures is shot into his brain.
In a few drawings from dells, he may have mentioned ECT treatment.
For example, a woman wears a feather hat and has a bouquet of flowers in her hand.
Above her, the pencil says "ECTLECTRC" next to it ".
Harris Diamant, a New York sculptor who bought the work of dells, thought he had dyslexia and thought he meant "electricity ".
So before Dade's identity was known, diamante named The Artist "Electric Pencil ".
Another possible hint of ECT may be the eyes in the Deres portrait.
Big and empty, no association. Like doll eyes.
Although the delicate curtains outline neat faces, they are still unforgettable.
Eyes from the field of electroshock therapy?
Such a portrait deed is labeled "Why Doctor.
One day seven years ago, diamante rushed into his apartment and spread a pile of pictures on the table.
He bought it from someone who bought the album for around $10,000 on eBay, but was quickly blamed by buyers.
He is a collector, not a businessman.
So he contacted the diamante he knew and he had already bid on the drawings earlier and asked if he was still interested.
Diamante told him that he was going to Boston soon to talk about a deal.
He said he was shaking when he looked at the drawings on the table that day.
"Content, form, color --
"Gorgeous, no one I 've ever seen," he recalled in a telephone interview in New York . ". “Those eyes . . . that stare.
I know those who do this have a very unique view of the world.
But he doesn't know who that person is.
The artist gave a detailed number of each of the 283 paintings, but did not sign them.
What Diaman has is a starting point.
Letterhead on many album pages: national asylum number
Some state hospitals don't. 3 on others.
For the next five years, diamante and BYN have tried to unravel the mystery of the unknown artist.
They made a documentary about electric pencils.
Beans put a book together.
The couple went to Missouri and even hired a private detective.
During this period, the New York Times listed the painting of the "Electric Pencil" as one of the most appreciated works at the Outsider Art Fair.
Finally, during a winter in 2011, a woman named Julie Phillips went through a Springfield news while working in Springfield --
A portrait of a lady wearing a badminton hat was seen.
Big eyes, lips from pur.
The newspaper reports are about the creators of the work that Diamante is trying to find some paintings.
Phillips looked carefully at the woman in the hat.
She knew she had seen her before.
The picture was painted in her house.
"That's uncle Edward's," she said to herself in a low voice.
Huaz was born on 1908 in the operation of the canal district of Panama.
He is named after the father who served in the Navy, and he will be the largest of the five children.
When the father's service ended, the family settled at a farm on the banks of the Finley River in Christian County, Missouri.
Chicken, turkey, or a pig or two.
Ed Duth raises cattle and his wife Clara is known for her Concord grape jelly.
Ed wants his eldest son to be able to help on the farm, but Edward is more likely to be a prank, hang around when work needs to be done, and don't go hunting or fishing.
He cried and laughed at strange times for no reason.
Things got so bad that when the family moved into the new house on the property, Edward was forced to stay in the old place.
According to family legend, when Clay went to the old house to torture Ed Hua, the ending came.
The two fought and Edward grabbed the axe.
Ed Deeds, having had enough, asked the court to get his son to plead guilty.
The boy is out of control-
The father told officials that stubborn and destructive, and perhaps even color-blind.
It was decided to send Edward to the Missouri state school in the city of Mashur, Missouri.
Edward, 18, quickly tried to kill himself by drinking antifreeze from a Ford car at home.
He did not want to leave home.
Dr Marshall quickly decided that he was out of their treatment.
They called him crazy and sent him to the asylum in Nevada, Missouri.
Family members have visited a lot over the years, but Edward's father has not.
"Once my grandfather put him in, that's it," Tudie Williams said at his home in Hawaii . ".
She and her family sometimes go for a picnic on the grounds of shelter.
Williams remembers that he always carries his painting tablet with him.
Once, when she was about six years old, he asked her to draw a rainbow.
She took out the crayons and made them.
The color is bold and the lines are strong.
"That's not a rainbow," he told her.
The rainbow is fluffy.
Then he drew one.
"This is one of the albums," she said . ".
Over time, the contract retreated and became unhappy, barely speaking during the visit.
Paul Del vicio, director of the federal mental health service center, said that the only people who have been held for years these days are people like Reagan shooter John Hinkley
He was acquitted of mental disorder.
Del Vecchio's understanding of the deed drawings is: "Very good.
"At some point, the deeds reached out to him --
Sewing albums with Clay
But in 1969, when the family moved, Clay Deeds told the moving crew that they could help themselves with whatever was left in the attic.
The album is there.
"In the years that followed, my mother was very angry with him," Phillips said . ".
"All we know is that it's gone forever.
"If not 14-year-
Not only did he take it out of Springfield's trash can, but he did it for 35 years.
According to Neville byn, he was a Texas truck driver at the time and sold the album on eBay because he needed money.
Dells's work is called outsider art, which means that it is not from the world of traditional art, nor is it an artist that has been officially trained.
The plantation drawings of former slave bill trile are an example.
Tom Parker, deputy director of Hirschl & Adler Gallery in New York, said that background stories are always an important part of outsider art and he is the only representative of deed's paintings.
"They created the opportunity," Parker said Friday . ".
In 2011, after the exposure of Dells's work, but before he was recognized, Lyle Rexer, director of the New York School of Visual Arts, wrote about the mysterious artist: "He may have models in his head, but they are overwhelmed or changed by his imaginative hiding.
This is not a conceptual design production, but something deep in the artist's body and mind.
"Now there is a angry mouth about the boy at Ozarks hill.
In 1973, contracts deemed harmless were discharged to a nursing home in Ozark, Missouri.
He was shut down for nearly half a century and lost his life in difficult times.
"But he did," said niece Phillips.
"He drew a picture with all the separation and loneliness and thought that his life would always be in that place.
Now the world has finally heard his voice.
We are all proud of it.
She visited her uncle shortly before his death in a nursing home.
"At that time he was old and his eyes were gentle," she recalled . ".
"He usually looks down like he doesn't want to be noticed.
Edwards Dietz, who died in a winter in 1987, never knew his paintings would cause a stir later.
Because of the arthritis hand, he has not painted for several years.
In the last days, he planted tomatoes in pots.
"They told me that it was very difficult for him to fall asleep," Phillips said . ".
"He has to sit in a chair for hours all night.
"He was buried in a family cemetery not far from the old farm, a place he had never thought of leaving.
Finally free, finally home.
Kansas City, Missouri. —
A simple drawing, finished with a pencil on the ledger pager, showing two hats side by side.
One is a variety of top caps, and the other is a long-tailed stocking cap, which is gradually thinner to the side.
The following artist wrote "wo mule".
"Keep an eye on the artist's information at all times.
He couldn't help it because he died in 1987.
But in any case, Edwards's deeds do not appeal to you, nor to the art experts and critics who are now trying to understand his work.
When he was a young man in his 1920 s South Missouri farm, he angrily chased his brother with an axe.
It's already a strange, unruly sort-
Easy to laugh for no reason-
This is a deep annoyance for his stern father, behavior will eventually be diagnosed as crazy and dedicated for life to the national Madhouse
In Nevada, Missouri.
For the next 40 years or so, the deed was trapped in a huge red brick sanctuary with Gothic towers.
Not for money, fame, or vision of the future.
His future is there. he is the only one.
On the ordinary ledger paper, neither side mind the letterhead at the top of the spiritual institution, nor mind the "due balance"
$ "At the bottom ".
Portraits, landscapes, animals with hats.
Some are mysterious subtitles. If a 14-year-
The old boy did not get the drawings from the garbage dump, and no one will talk about Edward's deeds today.
He's not going to be an outsider.
The 283 paintings of this Ozarks farm boy, who loves to hunt squirrels, are drawn at the New York gallery and the Lausanne museum in Switzerland for an exhibition that will not cost $16,000 per page.
"There's a basically discarded person here," says New York art designer Neville Byne, whose husband bought DE on eBay before the artist was recognized.
"His father didn't want him around.
He disappeared into this big Victorian institution.
"His art is now gone in the world, and the voice is finally heard. how moved is it?
"It is not uncommon for Deeds to happen.
Mental institutions and large public hospitals in the early part of the last century had thousands, sometimes for the convenience of families, just like sympathy for patients.
"In those days, the diagnosis was very subjective and anyone could petition the judge," said John emmerrick, director of New Direction behavioral health medicine in Kansas City, Missouri . ".
In the 1950 s, anti-depression drugs and drugs such as libelline, torazine and lithium began to lay the foundation for the development of modern psychiatry.
Today, according to Emerick, people like Deeds are likely to receive medication and outpatient treatment.
The family said that although behavior is likely to be a mental illness, he will not hurt his brother that day.
They told him that he jumped in the River and saved the same brother, Clay, from drowning.
Clay's daughter, Tudi Williams, says her father is full of guilt for the rest of his life.
"My father is a strong man, but sometimes he cries at night and we know it's for Edward," Williams said . ".
What Edward's deeds are really abandoned is a spirit of fantasy;
He likes hunting, fishing, and art, not ploughing, which his father would not accept.
Williams and her sister think Uncle Edward may have autism or ADHD.
Of course, there is nothing to be exiled to the sanctuary for life.
But then electric shock therapy.
ECT, also known as electroshock therapy, in which voltage enough to cause seizures is shot into his brain.
In a few drawings from dells, he may have mentioned ECT treatment.
For example, a woman wears a feather hat and has a bouquet of flowers in her hand.
Above her, the pencil says "ECTLECTRC" next to it ".
Harris Diamant, a New York sculptor who bought the work of dells, thought he had dyslexia and thought he meant "electricity ".
So before Dade's identity was known, diamante named The Artist "Electric Pencil ".
Another possible hint of ECT may be the eyes in the Deres portrait.
Big and empty, no association. Like doll eyes.
Although the delicate curtains outline neat faces, they are still unforgettable.
Eyes from the field of electroshock therapy?
Such a portrait deed is labeled "Why Doctor.
One day seven years ago, diamante rushed into his apartment and spread a pile of pictures on the table.
He bought it from someone who bought the album for around $10,000 on eBay, but was quickly blamed by buyers.
He is a collector, not a businessman.
So he contacted the diamante he knew and he had already bid on the drawings earlier and asked if he was still interested.
Diamante told him that he was going to Boston soon to talk about a deal.
He said he was shaking when he looked at the drawings on the table that day.
"Content, form, color --
"Gorgeous, no one I 've ever seen," he recalled in a telephone interview in New York . ". “Those eyes . . . that stare.
I know those who do this have a very unique view of the world.
But he doesn't know who that person is.
The artist gave a detailed number of each of the 283 paintings, but did not sign them.
What Diaman has is a starting point.
Letterhead on many album pages: national asylum number
Some state hospitals don't. 3 on others.
For the next five years, diamante and BYN have tried to unravel the mystery of the unknown artist.
They made a documentary about electric pencils.
Beans put a book together.
The couple went to Missouri and even hired a private detective.
During this period, the New York Times listed the painting of the "Electric Pencil" as one of the most appreciated works at the Outsider Art Fair.
Finally, during a winter in 2011, a woman named Julie Phillips went through a Springfield news while working in Springfield --
A portrait of a lady wearing a badminton hat was seen.
Big eyes, lips from pur.
The newspaper reports are about the creators of the work that Diamante is trying to find some paintings.
Phillips looked carefully at the woman in the hat.
She knew she had seen her before.
The picture was painted in her house.
"That's uncle Edward's," she said to herself in a low voice.
Huaz was born on 1908 in the operation of the canal district of Panama.
He is named after the father who served in the Navy, and he will be the largest of the five children.
When the father's service ended, the family settled at a farm on the banks of the Finley River in Christian County, Missouri.
Chicken, turkey, or a pig or two.
Ed Duth raises cattle and his wife Clara is known for her Concord grape jelly.
Ed wants his eldest son to be able to help on the farm, but Edward is more likely to be a prank, hang around when work needs to be done, and don't go hunting or fishing.
He cried and laughed at strange times for no reason.
Things got so bad that when the family moved into the new house on the property, Edward was forced to stay in the old place.
According to family legend, when Clay went to the old house to torture Ed Hua, the ending came.
The two fought and Edward grabbed the axe.
Ed Deeds, having had enough, asked the court to get his son to plead guilty.
The boy is out of control-
The father told officials that stubborn and destructive, and perhaps even color-blind.
It was decided to send Edward to the Missouri state school in the city of Mashur, Missouri.
Edward, 18, quickly tried to kill himself by drinking antifreeze from a Ford car at home.
He did not want to leave home.
Dr Marshall quickly decided that he was out of their treatment.
They called him crazy and sent him to the asylum in Nevada, Missouri.
Family members have visited a lot over the years, but Edward's father has not.
"Once my grandfather put him in, that's it," Tudie Williams said at his home in Hawaii . ".
She and her family sometimes go for a picnic on the grounds of shelter.
Williams remembers that he always carries his painting tablet with him.
Once, when she was about six years old, he asked her to draw a rainbow.
She took out the crayons and made them.
The color is bold and the lines are strong.
"That's not a rainbow," he told her.
The rainbow is fluffy.
Then he drew one.
"This is one of the albums," she said . ".
Over time, the contract retreated and became unhappy, barely speaking during the visit.
Paul Del vicio, director of the federal mental health service center, said that the only people who have been held for years these days are people like Reagan shooter John Hinkley
He was acquitted of mental disorder.
Del Vecchio's understanding of the deed drawings is: "Very good.
"At some point, the deeds reached out to him --
Sewing albums with Clay
But in 1969, when the family moved, Clay Deeds told the moving crew that they could help themselves with whatever was left in the attic.
The album is there.
"In the years that followed, my mother was very angry with him," Phillips said . ".
"All we know is that it's gone forever.
"If not 14-year-
Not only did he take it out of Springfield's trash can, but he did it for 35 years.
According to Neville byn, he was a Texas truck driver at the time and sold the album on eBay because he needed money.
Dells's work is called outsider art, which means that it is not from the world of traditional art, nor is it an artist that has been officially trained.
The plantation drawings of former slave bill trile are an example.
Tom Parker, deputy director of Hirschl & Adler Gallery in New York, said that background stories are always an important part of outsider art and he is the only representative of deed's paintings.
"They created the opportunity," Parker said Friday . ".
In 2011, after the exposure of Dells's work, but before he was recognized, Lyle Rexer, director of the New York School of Visual Arts, wrote about the mysterious artist: "He may have models in his head, but they are overwhelmed or changed by his imaginative hiding.
This is not a conceptual design production, but something deep in the artist's body and mind.
"Now there is a angry mouth about the boy at Ozarks hill.
In 1973, contracts deemed harmless were discharged to a nursing home in Ozark, Missouri.
He was shut down for nearly half a century and lost his life in difficult times.
"But he did," said niece Phillips.
"He drew a picture with all the separation and loneliness and thought that his life would always be in that place.
Now the world has finally heard his voice.
We are all proud of it.
She visited her uncle shortly before his death in a nursing home.
"At that time he was old and his eyes were gentle," she recalled . ".
"He usually looks down like he doesn't want to be noticed.
Edwards Dietz, who died in a winter in 1987, never knew his paintings would cause a stir later.
Because of the arthritis hand, he has not painted for several years.
In the last days, he planted tomatoes in pots.
"They told me that it was very difficult for him to fall asleep," Phillips said . ".
"He has to sit in a chair for hours all night.
"He was buried in a family cemetery not far from the old farm, a place he had never thought of leaving.
Finally free, finally home.
Kansas City, Missouri. —
A simple drawing, finished with a pencil on the ledger pager, showing two hats side by side.
One is a variety of top caps, and the other is a long-tailed stocking cap, which is gradually thinner to the side.
The following artist wrote "wo mule".
"Keep an eye on the artist's information at all times.
He couldn't help it because he died in 1987.
But in any case, Edwards's deeds do not appeal to you, nor to the art experts and critics who are now trying to understand his work.
When he was a young man in his 1920 s South Missouri farm, he angrily chased his brother with an axe.
It's already a strange, unruly sort-
Easy to laugh for no reason-
This is a deep annoyance for his stern father, behavior will eventually be diagnosed as crazy and dedicated for life to the national Madhouse
In Nevada, Missouri.
For the next 40 years or so, the deed was trapped in a huge red brick sanctuary with Gothic towers.
Not for money, fame, or vision of the future.
His future is there. he is the only one.
On the ordinary ledger paper, neither side mind the letterhead at the top of the spiritual institution, nor mind the "due balance"
$ "At the bottom ".
Portraits, landscapes, animals with hats.
Some are mysterious subtitles. If a 14-year-
The old boy did not get the drawings from the garbage dump, and no one will talk about Edward's deeds today.
He's not going to be an outsider.
The 283 paintings of this Ozarks farm boy, who loves to hunt squirrels, are drawn at the New York gallery and the Lausanne museum in Switzerland for an exhibition that will not cost $16,000 per page.
"There's a basically discarded person here," says New York art designer Neville Byne, whose husband bought DE on eBay before the artist was recognized.
"His father didn't want him around.
He disappeared into this big Victorian institution.
"His art is now gone in the world, and the voice is finally heard. how moved is it?
"It is not uncommon for Deeds to happen.
Mental institutions and large public hospitals in the early part of the last century had thousands, sometimes for the convenience of families, just like sympathy for patients.
"In those days, the diagnosis was very subjective and anyone could petition the judge," said John emmerrick, director of New Direction behavioral health medicine in Kansas City, Missouri . ".
In the 1950 s, anti-depression drugs and drugs such as libelline, torazine and lithium began to lay the foundation for the development of modern psychiatry.
Today, according to Emerick, people like Deeds are likely to receive medication and outpatient treatment.
The family said that although behavior is likely to be a mental illness, he will not hurt his brother that day.
They told him that he jumped in the River and saved the same brother, Clay, from drowning.
Clay's daughter, Tudi Williams, says her father is full of guilt for the rest of his life.
"My father is a strong man, but sometimes he cries at night and we know it's for Edward," Williams said . ".
What Edward's deeds are really abandoned is a spirit of fantasy;
He likes hunting, fishing, and art, not ploughing, which his father would not accept.
Williams and her sister think Uncle Edward may have autism or ADHD.
Of course, there is nothing to be exiled to the sanctuary for life.
But then electric shock therapy.
ECT, also known as electroshock therapy, in which voltage enough to cause seizures is shot into his brain.
In a few drawings from dells, he may have mentioned ECT treatment.
For example, a woman wears a feather hat and has a bouquet of flowers in her hand.
Above her, the pencil says "ECTLECTRC" next to it ".
Harris Diamant, a New York sculptor who bought the work of dells, thought he had dyslexia and thought he meant "electricity ".
So before Dade's identity was known, diamante named The Artist "Electric Pencil ".
Another possible hint of ECT may be the eyes in the Deres portrait.
Big and empty, no association. Like doll eyes.
Although the delicate curtains outline neat faces, they are still unforgettable.
Eyes from the field of electroshock therapy?
Such a portrait deed is labeled "Why Doctor.
One day seven years ago, diamante rushed into his apartment and spread a pile of pictures on the table.
He bought it from someone who bought the album for around $10,000 on eBay, but was quickly blamed by buyers.
He is a collector, not a businessman.
So he contacted the diamante he knew and he had already bid on the drawings earlier and asked if he was still interested.
Diamante told him that he was going to Boston soon to talk about a deal.
He said he was shaking when he looked at the drawings on the table that day.
"Content, form, color --
"Gorgeous, no one I 've ever seen," he recalled in a telephone interview in New York . ". “Those eyes . . . that stare.
I know those who do this have a very unique view of the world.
But he doesn't know who that person is.
The artist gave a detailed number of each of the 283 paintings, but did not sign them.
What Diaman has is a starting point.
Letterhead on many album pages: national asylum number
Some state hospitals don't. 3 on others.
For the next five years, diamante and BYN have tried to unravel the mystery of the unknown artist.
They made a documentary about electric pencils.
Beans put a book together.
The couple went to Missouri and even hired a private detective.
During this period, the New York Times listed the painting of the "Electric Pencil" as one of the most appreciated works at the Outsider Art Fair.
Finally, during a winter in 2011, a woman named Julie Phillips went through a Springfield news while working in Springfield --
A portrait of a lady wearing a badminton hat was seen.
Big eyes, lips from pur.
The newspaper reports are about the creators of the work that Diamante is trying to find some paintings.
Phillips looked carefully at the woman in the hat.
She knew she had seen her before.
The picture was painted in her house.
"That's uncle Edward's," she said to herself in a low voice.
Huaz was born on 1908 in the operation of the canal district of Panama.
He is named after the father who served in the Navy, and he will be the largest of the five children.
When the father's service ended, the family settled at a farm on the banks of the Finley River in Christian County, Missouri.
Chicken, turkey, or a pig or two.
Ed Duth raises cattle and his wife Clara is known for her Concord grape jelly.
Ed wants his eldest son to be able to help on the farm, but Edward is more likely to be a prank, hang around when work needs to be done, and don't go hunting or fishing.
He cried and laughed at strange times for no reason.
Things got so bad that when the family moved into the new house on the property, Edward was forced to stay in the old place.
According to family legend, when Clay went to the old house to torture Ed Hua, the ending came.
The two fought and Edward grabbed the axe.
Ed Deeds, having had enough, asked the court to get his son to plead guilty.
The boy is out of control-
The father told officials that stubborn and destructive, and perhaps even color-blind.
It was decided to send Edward to the Missouri state school in the city of Mashur, Missouri.
Edward, 18, quickly tried to kill himself by drinking antifreeze from a Ford car at home.
He did not want to leave home.
Dr Marshall quickly decided that he was out of their treatment.
They called him crazy and sent him to the asylum in Nevada, Missouri.
Family members have visited a lot over the years, but Edward's father has not.
"Once my grandfather put him in, that's it," Tudie Williams said at his home in Hawaii . ".
She and her family sometimes go for a picnic on the grounds of shelter.
Williams remembers that he always carries his painting tablet with him.
Once, when she was about six years old, he asked her to draw a rainbow.
She took out the crayons and made them.
The color is bold and the lines are strong.
"That's not a rainbow," he told her.
The rainbow is fluffy.
Then he drew one.
"This is one of the albums," she said . ".
Over time, the contract retreated and became unhappy, barely speaking during the visit.
Paul Del vicio, director of the federal mental health service center, said that the only people who have been held for years these days are people like Reagan shooter John Hinkley
He was acquitted of mental disorder.
Del Vecchio's understanding of the deed drawings is: "Very good.
"At some point, the deeds reached out to him --
Sewing albums with Clay
But in 1969, when the family moved, Clay Deeds told the moving crew that they could help themselves with whatever was left in the attic.
The album is there.
"In the years that followed, my mother was very angry with him," Phillips said . ".
"All we know is that it's gone forever.
"If not 14-year-
Not only did he take it out of Springfield's trash can, but he did it for 35 years.
According to Neville byn, he was a Texas truck driver at the time and sold the album on eBay because he needed money.
Dells's work is called outsider art, which means that it is not from the world of traditional art, nor is it an artist that has been officially trained.
The plantation drawings of former slave bill trile are an example.
Tom Parker, deputy director of Hirschl & Adler Gallery in New York, said that background stories are always an important part of outsider art and he is the only representative of deed's paintings.
"They created the opportunity," Parker said Friday . ".
In 2011, after the exposure of Dells's work, but before he was recognized, Lyle Rexer, director of the New York School of Visual Arts, wrote about the mysterious artist: "He may have models in his head, but they are overwhelmed or changed by his imaginative hiding.
This is not a conceptual design production, but something deep in the artist's body and mind.
"Now there is a angry mouth about the boy at Ozarks hill.
In 1973, contracts deemed harmless were discharged to a nursing home in Ozark, Missouri.
He was shut down for nearly half a century and lost his life in difficult times.
"But he did," said niece Phillips.
"He drew a picture with all the separation and loneliness and thought that his life would always be in that place.
Now the world has finally heard his voice.
We are all proud of it.
She visited her uncle shortly before his death in a nursing home.
"At that time he was old and his eyes were gentle," she recalled . ".
"He usually looks down like he doesn't want to be noticed.
Edwards Dietz, who died in a winter in 1987, never knew his paintings would cause a stir later.
Because of the arthritis hand, he has not painted for several years.
In the last days, he planted tomatoes in pots.
"They told me that it was very difficult for him to fall asleep," Phillips said . ".
"He has to sit in a chair for hours all night.
"He was buried in a family cemetery not far from the old farm, a place he had never thought of leaving.
Finally free, finally home.
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