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Showing posts from November, 2019
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I married Hugh Lee in 1961.  We didn't have reality TV in those days.  But I didn't need TV!  The reality was, I had married a rough, tough woodsman who had grown up hunting and fishing.  His first gun was a double barrel four/ten shotgun he received on his 7th birthday.  Hugh grew up in the marshes and ricefields of our coastal South Carolina.  His first spending money was from selling animal hides.  That included mink, racoon, and alligators. The first week or two after we were married, Hugh suddenly stopped the car, snatched his thirty-thirty rifle out from under the seat, ran to the edge of the marsh which came right up to the edge of the road. He fired one shot; then stepped out of his shoes, stripped to the waist, and went overboard. He vanished under water.  When he came to the top again, he was holding an alligator about five feet long by the snout!  He pulled it out of the water and threw it in the trunk of the car.  H...

November 10, 2019

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Many years ago, my husband came home with an interesting piece of wood he had found in the river. I "saw" a picture and painted on the piece.  Since that day, I have probably painted an eighteen wheeler full of driftwood boards.  I no longer live close to the marshes where I used to collect the driftwood, but one day I found an antique ironing board at Habitat for Humanity.  It became my first ironing board painting.  I sold it immediately; didn't even make a picture. Then I began to look for the old wooden ironing boards.  My favorites are one board wide, usually 12 inches.  I also like wooden legs.  Usually I paint a wash day scene on the ironing boards. As a child, Monday was "wash day."  This meant water was heated in a big black pot over an open fire outside. Two big washtubs were filled with water drawn from a hand pump or a well in the yard.  One tub was used for washing equipped with a washboard, a hunk of ...
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I guess it's about time!  So many people have seen my art work, admired, and purchased it! (www.Beckysart.com) I suppose I can call myself an accomplished and experienced artist since my work is showing up in antique stores and estate sales. In fact, I've already written instructions for my children when it's all in an estate---MY OWN! The kinds of things people say to me is, "Your work tells a story. Have you also written it down?" Well, no I haven't; not until now. Thus begins, Becky Lee's Art Blog. So, where do I begin?  I'll start with my most recent painting.  I have just completed a painting of mallard ducks, a drake and a hen. My inspiration is the number of ducks I have picked and "pillowed" in my life! In 1961, I married my first husband, Hugh Lee.  Hugh lived and worked all year long in anticipation of duck season.  His work was in drainage construction, primarily maintaining dikes in the rice fields of the South Carolina low...