ARTWORK
BY IOWA ARTIST
ACCEPTED INTO MDA ART COLLECTION
 |
“My Dad and I” |
TUCSON, Ariz., Sept. 28, 2007 — A painting by Dorothy “Dottie” Hunt of Dysart, Iowa, has been accepted by the Muscular
Dystrophy Association’s Art Collection. Now in its 15th year, the Collection features artwork by people from across the country with
neuromuscular diseases.
Hunt’s “My Dad and I” is a painting of a male African lion and its cub, with a tawny veldt and sunset backdrop. Hunt created it
using a computer paint software program.
Formerly a longtime Arizona resident who now lives in a Dysart nursing home, Hunt, 65, expressed her original creativity in dress
designs. She designed and made wedding dresses for many years, but also created beaded jewelry and stained glass paintings when she had full
manual dexterity.
Hunt is affected by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease), which affects parts of the nervous system that
control voluntary muscle movement and cause muscles to become weak and then nonfunctional. She is now able to move only two fingers on one
hand.
“We’re deeply honored to welcome Dottie Hunt’s work into the permanent MDA Art Collection,” MDA President & CEO Gerald Weinberg
said. “Her contribution to our Collection will undoubtedly delight all who see it as it travels to galleries and museums as part of special
exhibits of the Collection.”
The new addition by Hunt is on display at MDA’s national headquarters in Tucson, Ariz. and can be seen at www.mda.org/commprog/art/displayall.aspx.
Hunt’s piece also will be included in MDA Art Collection traveling exhibits. The Collection was established in 1992 to focus
attention on the achievements of artists with disabilities and to emphasize that physical disability is no barrier to creativity.
The permanent Collection comprises more than 335 works by artists aged 2 to 82 and represents all 50 states. Each artist is affected by
one of the neuromuscular diseases in the MDA program.
Selected art from the Collection has been exhibited at the Dallas Museum of Art; Cork Gallery at Lincoln Center and Forbes
Magazine Galleries in New York; Tucson Museum of Art; Bishop Museum in Honolulu; Chicago Public Library, Harold Washington Library Center;
Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art; Los Angeles Children’s Museum; JFK Center at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; Fresno Metropolitan
Museum; Duluth Art Institute; Capital Children’s Museum, Washington, D.C.; and the Henry Ford Centennial Library in Dearborn, Mich.
MDA is a voluntary health agency working to defeat neuromuscular diseases through programs of worldwide research, comprehensive
services, and far-reaching professional and public health education. MDA maintains clinics for area adults and children affected by
neuromuscular diseases at Younker Memorial Rehabilitation Center in Des Moines and the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa
City.
The Association’s programs are funded almost entirely by individual private contributors.
|