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Artist Katharine
Angell Woodman says the woods
behind her Searsmont Rd. Studio in
North Appleton are enchanted.
Fairies, nymphs and leprechauns
gather there to do mischief and
consort with nature. Sometimes they
leave gifts for the children who
visit Woodman. And sometimes, a
fairy will still her beating wings,
will hesitate just long enough for
Woodman to capture her on film.
"All
forests are enchanted," says
Woodman. "But especially the
forests in Maine, because of the
vast variety of toadstools, mosses
and ferns."
Inside her studio, cutouts of
angels swing from cabinet knobs and
feathers, glitter and white silk
chiffon fill a hundred nooks and
crannies. Red-spangled shoes the
size of an acorn claim space on
Woodman's desk. along with
photographs of fairies and a dish of
Lunar Moth wings. Other wings large
enough for a human fairy hang in a
corner, waiting for a child eager to
leave the real world with her Nikes
at the door.
In part, children are what inspired
Woodman to begin creating her fairy
prints. She remembers a nearly
idyllic childhood, roaming in the
woods behind her grandmother's Seal
Harbor home. she remembers "secret
places" to play, parents who
remained married to one another and
a myriad of opportunities simply to
be a child.
"Today", Woodman says, "children
experience a different world.
Families are broken up. Other
families are in the trap of needing
two incomes. And the children are
hurt. They're left with television
and the so-called information
highway. It's so unconnected. Why do
we need so much information anyway?
We should just listen to our hearts.
So I decided to bring some of the
magic back."
As she speaks, Woodman points to a
picture of her grandmother, who
looks something like a fairy
godmother herself, and may serve as
a reminder to the artist of her own
charmed and magical childhood.
Woodman's words careen about the
room, dancing from topic to topic.
She laughs easily and frequently,
never allowing the conversation to
get too serious. Wisps of long
blonde hair frame her face, the rest
tucked into a knot a the back of her
neck. she gets up to change the
music.
"Jazz," she says. "it's
not my energy," as she searches
for classical music. A flute
concerto fills the room and drifts
through the open windows into the
enchanted woods behind.
Woodman moves to several boxes
filled with fairy prints. One by
one, she names the fairies pictured
and tells their story. She holds up
"LUNA" and in the
photograph, tiny Luna holds a
chrysalis, the hard shelled pupa of
a Monarch butterfly. "it's
real," she says, pointing to
the chrysalis. "Most people
when they see it don't know what it
is."It's Luna's job she
explains, to protect the chrysalis..
Monarch butterflies winter in the
mountains of Mexico, she says and
because of deforestation there and
seven inches of snow during the last
two winters, hundreds of thousands
have not survived to make the long
journey home to Maine. Woodman says
she only saw two last year.
You know, there are jewels of
moments in life, almost like, you
want to ask: "Hey, who's
scripting this?" She suddenly
interjects. "Like the other
day, I was thinking about how long
it had been since I'd seen a Monarch
and I looked out my front door and
there was a Monarch, fluttering at
me, as if to say: "I'm back."
She continues the litany of fairy
names: Moonbeam ,Arianna, Harmony,
each a flicker of magic poised amid
toadstools and moss and the secrets
of the forest in her back yard.
Sometimes, she insists, creatures
appear in the finished photo that
were not there when she snapped the
shutter. But then, when you
photograph fairies for a living,
anything's possible.
Not that she hasn't had years of
experience in the world of art.
Woodman worked for 25 years as a
makeup artist in film and
television, painting such faces of
such wellknowns as Charlton Heston,
Lena Horne, Betsy Palmer and William
Shatner to name just a few. she also
describes herself as an avid
watercolorist who has had many shows
in New York City and Long island.
One day, a man from Canada came
into her studio and said he wanted
the framed print of the Star-Chaser
for his daughter, who's a year old.
He said he remembered from his
childhood a picture of two guardian
angels that hung over his bed, and
he wanted his daughter to have one
hanging by her crib, so she could
have the same magical moments of
childhood he had known..
I almost started to cry, for my
heart was so full from that glorious
moment! |