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Artist Jeanne Crider paints on anything she finds
By Colleen Slater
KP News
Jeanne
Crider paints on anything she finds — rocks, leaves,
light bulbs, suitcases — in a studio built as an
extension of their home by her husband, Lee. After a
couple of years, their insurance company said she had a
business, as she sold some products retail. Lee detached
the studio with his chain saw. Later, when she stopped
the business, it was OK to have a studio attached, and
he patched it back together.

Jeanne Crider with a
Dodge pickup tailgate she is touching up.
Photo by Colleen Slater |
“I can
teach anyone decorative art,” Crider says. “I’ve never
lost a student.”
It’s a
learned art, and she says it’s one the student or
practicing artist needs to keep learning.
Crider
began tole painting over 30 years ago to encourage a
friend. “I can’t even draw a straight line!” she told
her friend. Six months later, she was hooked.
Tole
painting became designated as a decorative art, and in
1986, Crider received her Certificate for Decorative
Artist, after a competition of 240 people with 22
certificates awarded by the Northwest Pastel Society.
About 15
years ago, she began doing fine art. The difference is
decorative art uses someone else’s pattern, and fine art
is creating something original. Crider used to attend
many conventions, with five or six teachers per
convention. “I’ve probably had over 100 different
teachers,” she notes.
Eventually, she thought it was time to share her
knowledge with others, and she not only has classes in
her studio, but has taught at conventions herself.
“There’s
no more satisfaction than seeing a student excited,” she
says.

A full "meal" of
rocks, courtesy of Crider's creative touch.
Photo by Colleen Slater |
Her weekly
ongoing classes teach the basics as well as new
theories. Some students have returned for as many as 15
years, as a way to continue their artistry and be
encouraged.
Crider
loves to be different, experimenting with unique items.
On camping trips, she picks up the first thing her eye
lands on and paints it. She calls this “found art” — “I
found it and I painted it.” One project was a leaf, and
she had to think about that for awhile. When she showed
it to her friends and students, everyone else had to try
one, too. That turned into a Santa Claus, and her
various Santa objects form quite a collection: light
bulbs, spoons, rocks, records, CDs. One Santa was a
shotgun shell.
Her most
fun project occurred in Arizona. “It’s a total idle
place,” she says. She set up her canvas outside to paint
scenery. A man stopped to ask if she could paint a bear.
Yes, she could. “On a motor home?” She thought she
could. He showed her a postcard with a bear in
huckleberries, and she produced it on his motor home,
with plenty of curious and amused onlookers. She
spray-painted the backdrop, and Lee had to hold up large
pieces of cardboard to prevent the wind carrying paint
to other trailers.
She and a
small group of friends, “The Thursday Girls,” get
together each week to paint. “We’re hard on each other,”
she says of their critiques. All are practicing artists,
and they have an annual show of their work at Gig
Harbor’s Kimball Espresso Gallery in October. This fall
the theme will be “Year of the Dogs.”
“That
doesn’t mean we have to paint dogs,” she says with a
grin. “It might be a dogfish, a hot dog…” There will be
some traditional dogs, but there will be another artist
or two who, like her, opt to be creative and surprising.
Walls,
cupboards and various items in her studio display her
work. It’s a comfortable space where Crider, artist
friends, students and grandchildren love to be.
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