IMAGE: CNS photo/Stephen Brashear, Northwest Catholic
By Anna Weaver
SHORELINE, Wash. (CNS) — Among Mary Larson’s
Shoreline living-room pictures is a small photo of a man with furrowed eyebrows
and a full white beard. His name is James, but when Larson knew him, he was
better known as “The Professor.”
The two met in 1995 when Larson was a
volunteer nurse at Christ House in Washington, D.C., a medical respite center
for the homeless.
James was a patient there, tall, quiet and
always carrying around a large duffel bag stuffed with sheet music. At
lunchtime, he’d sit down at the center’s piano and make it come alive with
exquisite music, Larson told Northwest Catholic, the news magazine of the
Archdiocese of Seattle.
The Professor, the story went, had once been
an instructor at a prestigious college before a life event left him homeless.
“I think his photograph is out with all of
our family photos because he will forever be special in my life,” Larson said.
“It’s just a reminder to me that you never
know what’s going on in somebody’s life and you never know what can happen in
your own life.”
The Professor eventually became one of
Larson’s first portrait painting subjects.
Larson has become known in the Seattle area
and beyond for creating vivid portraits of her patients at Harborview Medical
Center’s Pioneer Square Clinic.
All of her portrait subjects have been
touched by homelessness, said Larson, the clinic’s assistant nurse manager.
The parishioner at St. Luke Catholic Church in
Shoreline, Washington, said her faith has taught her “that we are in this life
together. And a big part of it is helping each other and doing whatever little
thing we can to make our world a better place. I’m hopeful that with my art
that’s one of the ways that I am able to try and make it a better place.”
Larson grew up in an active Catholic family
with a service mentality. Her uncle, Father Jan Larson, is a senior priest for
the Archdiocese of Seattle.
Her parents were involved at Our Lady of the
Lake Parish in North Seattle, and she attended the parish school before going
to nearby Bishop Blanchet High School.
Her Catholic upbringing taught her to
incorporate Gospel values into everyday life, she said. A particularly
influential experience for her was when Bishop Blanchet’s campus ministry
program made cheese sandwiches and took them to the St. Martin de Porres
Shelter, which serves homeless men 50 and older.
“That was one of my first big experiences
with homelessness and probably one of the most important in determining my
trajectory,” she said.
While Larson was in high school, her family
started attending Seattle’s St. James Cathedral, where they got to know Archbishop
Raymond G. Hunthausen, who headed the Seattle Archdiocese from 1975 to 1991. Larson said the archbishop and his focus on
service, is one of her inspirations. Larson’s portrait of the archbishop hangs
in Cathedral Hall today.
Archbishop Hunthausen encouraged Larson to
attend his alma mater, Carroll College in Helena, Montana, where she earned a
nursing degree and decided to focus on working with the poor and homeless.
But Larson also has been artistic since she
was young, doing illustrations, cartoons and eventually photography. In
college, she would call home and debate her career path with her parents, who
told her that she would figure out how to blend her art with nursing.
Larson eventually did a volunteer year at
Christ House in the District of Columbia, where she used her family’s
graduation gift of a camera to take photographs of homeless people, like The
Professor.
After moving back to Seattle in 1996, she
started nursing work at the Pioneer Square Clinic and various shelter sites.
On a rainy day in Seattle several years after
college, Larson passed an art supply store, went in and bought some
paints to try out. The first paintings she did were portraits based on the
photos of homeless people she’d taken in the nation’s capital.
After Larson hung some of those portraits in
the Pioneer Square Clinic, she’d find her patients staring at them. Without
knowing the stories of the portrait subjects, the patients would tell her, “I
was homeless once and I can tell that they are homeless.”
Then some of the patients asked her to paint
them. She has since completed more than 300 such portraits.
When Larson was getting ready to hang her
first series of portraits at a Starbucks in Seattle, it didn’t feel right to
list them for sale for money. At the same time, the Pioneer Square Clinic
needed new socks for its clients.
So, Larson listed the portrait prices as
several hundred pairs of socks. They quickly sold and she has maintained this
charitable bartering system for her work ever since.
Paintings have sold for hundreds of cans of
food, sandwiches, gloves, hats and other items needed at the clinic, area
shelters, food banks and charities.
Larson asks each of her subjects to tell her
one thing they want people to know about them and bases the painting’s backdrop
on that detail.
She often works on a series of portraits all
at once. The work goes in stops and starts around her full-time nursing job and
life with her husband, Joe Mahar, and their 9-year-old son, Paddy.
Larson said she wants people to smile when
they look at her work. Each subject should invite you in. Take Felton, a
regular client and a former boxer. He casually grins at the viewer in front of
a Wheaties logo, like the cereal box on which Muhammad Ali once appeared.
“He has the patience of a saint, he’s been
waiting so long for me to finish,” Larson said of Felton’s portrait.
“I think that Felton, like so many people I
paint, is a champion,” she said. “He’s gone through some of life’s most
difficult times and still keeps his smile. He still keeps hope and happiness no
matter how hard times have gotten. He knows that with this art he’s able to
help people by lending his face to this project.”
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Weaver
is multimedia editor at Northwest Catholic, the news magazine and website of
the Archdiocese of Seattle.
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