Linda Benson’s ‘Elsa’s Survival’
On view in the main gallery of the Alliance for the Arts through September 30 is Storm Stories, a visual art exhibit that features 53 works of art by Florida artists in reaction to Hurricane Ian. Linda Benson’s collage, Elsa’s Survival, is one of the artworks juried into the show.
When Ian struck, Linda and her 110-pound Great Pyrenees dog, Elsa, resided comfortably in small house situated on a canal that empties into the Caloosahatchee River. But as Ian bore down on them, muddy river water surged into the structure, forcing Linda and Elsa onto the dining room tabletop. Watching warily as the water continued to rise, she slipped a life vest onto the 110-pound Great Pyrenees and donned one herself. “It got up to over four feet in the house,” she later told Florida Weekly correspondent Janice T. Paine.
Sitting in the pitch black darkness, Benson began formulating survival plans, which included fleeing into the crawl space in the attic. She recalled that there was an axe near the front door, but the water began to recede before she had to press that plan into action. Around midnight, she and Else made their way into the garage, where they spent the night, cold and shivering, in the family’s waterlogged auto.
In the morning, Linda and Elsa crept out of the car to survey the damage. Her outdoor fridge was floating in the pool. All of her art supplies were ruined. Worst of all, her prized floating studio and gallery, The Artist Xpress, a vintage 46-foot Aquahome houseboat, was nowhere to be found.
While her art supplies, paintings and other artworks were either destroyed or gone, at least she and Elsa had managed to survive the storm.
“I’m always trying new and fun ways of expressing my art,” she says.
Surviving Hurrican Ian now puts an exclamation point on her creative process.
September 2, 2023.