Keeping busy, creating beauty, staying young at any age

Keeping busy, creating beauty, staying young at any age
From left: artist Shirley Fernekes, art teacher Ellen Metzger O’Shea, and artists Ray Merritt and Dolores Levy. Fernekes, Levy and Merritt shared an opening day for their artworks on Sunday, Feb. 5, at the Fountains at Millbrook, a collection O’Shea called an artist’s retrospection. 
Photo by Judith O’Hara Balfe

MILLBROOK —  If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, then there is a lot of beauty at the Fountains  retirement community, being created every day in the art studios, hung along the walls near the auditorium and leading to the reception area: many different subjects painted from a myriad of perspectives.

The artworks are created by residents, most of whom are retired, yet keeping young by keeping busy, and the art show that opened on Sunday, Feb. 5, was an example of just how busy they can be. Three artists are showcased, and the scope of the show is from wild animals to domesticated cats, flowers, forests, lighthouses, sea scapes and people. The artists are from different places and have led different lives, but all agree that being at the Fountains keeps them busy, young, happy and engaged.

Ray Merritt has been at the Fountains for three months and, having painted most of his life, felt right at home in the art studio. Originally from Poughkeepsie, his talent may derive from his mother, who also painted. Some of his paintings reflect an earlier Poughkeepsie, and one, of Wappingers Falls, may bring back memories to some who see it.

At 92, Merritt keeps busy when not painting by visiting the gym, working to regain some lost strength. He worked for about 40 years as a bread truck driver, but after slowing down upon retirement, he said he felt as though, after living alone for 28 years, he was losing interest and the gift of talking. His move to the retirement community has brought new life to his days.

Dolores Levy moved to the Fountains in July 2022 and immediately felt at home. From the South Shore of Long Island, she lived in Florida for 20 years,and also Portland, Maine. Levy likes to go to the art studio to study with Eileen Metzger O’Shea once or twice a week, but prefers mainly to paint at home. Her paintings reflect her interests, which are many and varied.

Levy worked as a social worker, specializing in child welfare. A second career followed, and she worked until she retired as a children’s school photographer. Today, at 90, aside from painting, she enjoys all the many activities that are offered at the community, as well as meeting new people.

The third artist is the “baby” of the group, a spry 89 who will turn 90 in September. Shirley Fernekes is a longtime artist whose paintings have twice been chosen to be a part of the Watermark Calendar, published every year with artwork chosen from the works of over 1,000 artists from the Watermark Communities, of which the Fountains is one.

Fernekes has been at the Fountains for about four years, and loves painting, but also loves the fact that she can stay busy and never be bored. Her love of flowers is evident in her works, but her interests are varied, and she takes her inspiration wherever she finds it: Three geraniums, all blooming at once in the window of her studio, became a large study of their bright red blooms. In her earlier life, Feneke taught painting.

Art teacher Ellen Metzger O’Shea has been at the Fountains for about seven years, and loves what she does. A skilled artist herself, her lessons come with warmth and affection, and she holds each and every artist in great esteem. Some of them have been painting most of their lives, some learn when they join the retirement community. To O’Shea, the level of skill doesn’t matter as much as the desire to create and to learn.

The works are on display now through the next opening, in spring 2023.

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