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In Memoriam
Mrs. Mary Ellen Shipnes
1908 - 2001
Mrs. Shipnes' many friends and admirers of her wonderful art, which
brought great pleasure to those fortunate to view her work, regret
her death on May 9, 2001. She lived a long, good life,
bringing joy to all who knew her.
The staff of the Huffington Center on Aging extends
sympathies to her family and friends, and wishes them to know that
the video clip of her at her beloved Paintbrush Hill Farm was well
received by those attending the American Society of Aging's meeting
in New Orleans, Louisiana in March 2001.
We will present her wonderful world of art to an
international audience at the World Congress of Gerontology in
Vancouver, British Columbia on July 2, 2001.Thus, her works and her example will continue to teach.
Even though the artist is gone, her works live on, still delighting the eye and the spirit.
Some of Mrs. Shipnes' bright, cheery pieces may be seen below.
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In 1911, when the then Miss McNamee was 3 years old, her father built a
summer home on a point overlooking the confluence of the Great Lakes just north of
Traverse City, Michigan: this was Northport Point, and was to influence the future artist
in many ways that we enjoy even today. Mary
Ellen grew up in Indianapolis, Indiana in a very artistic home. Her father was an
architect who always insisted on her learning fine sketching techniques; her mother was a
ceramist creating wonderful vases and beautiful objects to observe. In about 1925, Mary
Ellen was admitted to the Boston School of Fine Arts and lived on the Fenway, from which
she walked to school and still remembers those brisk winter days. |
| Back in Indianapolis, where young ladies of the day wore hats and gloves
to the marketplace, one of her girlfriends introduced her to the college roommate
"sweetheart" of Psi Upsilon, her fiancées fraternity, and love led her
ultimately to Houston, Texas in 1946 but not before she and Mr. Shipnes, who was an
executive with Sears and Roebuck, sailed the Caribbean, adding even more scenes to those
from Northport Point she would paint for countless persons to enjoy.
She recalls
invitational showings of her work at the Worth Avenue Gallery in Palm Beach, Florida, and
subsequently how people would write her and tell her where they had hung her paintings.
Mr. And Mrs. Shipnes raised a family in Houston in a new subdivision
called West Oaks out on San Felipe and Post Oak, which is where Houstons fabulous
Galleria shopping center and Tanglewood residential areas are located.
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some of the then country lanes where crushed shell roads, and a long way from downtown.
From her studio at her West Oaks home, Mary Ellen continued to produce wonderful bright
paintings that always depict scenes full of color, flowers, houses, and which evoke happy
feelings. The Shipneses also built a lovely country home in Brenham, Texas where the
rolling hills are covered with Texas Bluebonnets each spring. Mrs. Shipnes lived there
until her death; each summer she travelled to her childhood summer home in Michigan. The photos show her
seated on a bench seat in her back yard in Brenham this past Easter and at work in her
studio in Northport Point |
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Back to the Texas connection in a minute. So how did we (at the
Huffington Center on Aging) find out about this wonderful artists works and about
the very interesting life she led. Well, finally she lived long
enough to need the skills of an interdisciplinary geriatrics team, Geriatric Medicine
Associates, headed by HCOA director, Robert J. Luchi, M.D. In the course of Dr. Luchi and
his team conducting a comprehensive geriatric examination, they learned about Mrs.
Shipness artistic interests and how she still paints even with her macular
degeneration, a point Ill come back to.
Well thats part of the Texas connection, but, as Paul Harvey says,
"heres the rest of the story." Back in that West Oaks subdivision lived a
Houston oilman, the future CIA Director, Ambassador to China, Vice President and President
of the United States, George Herbert Walker Bush. Mr. And Mrs. Bush wanted a Texas scene
to be in the Ambassadors residence in Beijing, so Mrs. Shipnes painted one. When the
Bushes moved into the Vice Presidents house in Washington, D.C., they wanted another
Texas scene for that residence, and, again, Mrs. Shipnes painted one. The Bushes took that
painting with them to the White House; today it hangs in their summer home in
Kennebunkport, Maine. Next, of course came us. When Dr. Luchi learned about this, he asked
me (Dr. Bob Roush, Webmaster) to contact Mrs. Shipnes, and she provided us with a contact
sheet of some photographs of some of her work. We hope you enjoy them as much as we do.
We also hope that you appreciate the fact that this lady, who would have
turned 93 years old this summer, painted all of her life. Thats the important point.
She maintained a lifelong love of art, even through the trauma of losing her husband of 63
years and subsequently losing her central vision due to rapid onset of macular degeneration. Coupled with this she had some severe low-back pain due to
osteoporosis. She learned how to continue to enjoy life and paint, and thats the lesson those of us learn from our
"teachers" whove already "traveled " the road of life a lot
farther than most. She exemplified what we at the Huffington Center on Aging believe is so
wonderful about the painting Francisco de Goya painted at age 80: crippled with kyphosis
and arthritis he entitled this work, "Aun Aprendo," which translates to "I
am still learning." Mrs. Shipnes learned all of her long life; hopefully, all of us will, too.
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Alzheimer's Self Portraits
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