Linda Benson
Genre: Impressionist
Motif: Portraiture, Maritime
Galleries: Arts for ACT Gallery
Her Art
Linda Benson spends her days creating art aboard a 46-foot 1969 Chris Craft vintage Aquahome that she’s dubbed Artist Xpress. Taking a page out of Claude Monet’s playbook, she has outfitted the vessel as an art studio and floating gallery, which she uses to paint ghost shrimp boats, “Jaws-Sea-Art,” plein air paintings and other nautically-influenced motifs. Linda also includes musicians during Music Walk, Crazy Catz and portraits on location in her diverse artistic repertoire.
“I’m always trying new and fun ways of expressing my art,” she says, including monochromatic washes like the one she employed in her rendering of Veronica Shoemaker.
Linda’s rendering of Veronica Shoemaker is on display at The Edison & Ford Winter Estates through March, 2015, which is National Women’s History Month. For more information about the exhibit, please email tom@artswfl.com or telephone 239-691-2292. For more information on Linda or to commission work by the artist, please email ArtistXpress@ymail.com or telephone 239-645-0787.
Portrait of Veronica Shoemaker for Fort Myers Founding Females Portrait Exhibition
Linda has captured Veronica Shoemaker on canvas for the Fort Myers Founding Female portrait exhibition. “I enjoyed capturing her in oils using my new monochromatic technique of silver and black,” Benson reports. The finished work depicts a younger Shoemaker. “I found some great references, including a college-produced video. I studied many versions of her and this is what materialized.”
Veronica Shoemaker was born in 1928 in the Dunbar community, which was known at the time as Safety Hill. The second oldest of 11 children, she attended Dunbar High School during the day and organized Parent Teacher Association meetings in Dunbar’s schools at night. She wanted African American parents to have a voice in their children’s education, and so when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of school desegregation in 1954, she fought vigorously to desegregate Lee County Schools. She also battled for fare wages, voter rights, and equal education for all.
In 1966, Shoemaker ran for Fort Myers City Council and lost. But she did not give up, finally winning the seat in 1982, thereby becoming the first African American to serve on the City Council. “After 16 years, winning the election was a huge milestone for me and for many others,” said Shoemaker in a 2007 interview for Florida Weekly. She would hold that seat for the next 26 years.
Shoemaker has always brought a sense of passion and determination to all of her endeavors. Over the years she has been an active member of the Dunbar Improvement Association, the Lee County NAACP, the Lee County Food Bank, the Lee County AIDS Task Force, the National Federation of Florists Society, Women in Municipal Government, and the Lee County Leadership Council.
“It was always important to me to fulfill my vision and be involved,” Shoemaker told Florida Weekly in July, 2007. “I prepared myself by reading a lot, studying the laws, and saying yes when I was asked to serve on committees.”