The poem and the painting are always displayed together. Indeed, they evolved together. WWS calls the painting a visual interrogation of the poem, which changed as the painting came into being. The anger expressed was born of her body’s failure to perform as it did pre-Parkinson’s, but that anger then moves into the frustrations women face in a society that similarly limits their performance. Then it grows further: “It’s also centered around this whole idea of disabled people. We’re meant to be quiet. We’re meant not to have a voice. It’s about, I suppose, anything in society where people look at you, and you’re the disadvantaged.”

- WWS

Artwork April 27, 2022

Jorge Alvarado

La Ciudad Dormida (¨The Sleeping City¨)

April 27, 2022
Artwork April 7, 2022

Bob Bernard

Padley Gorge

April 7, 2022
Artwork March 4, 2022

Laura Olmos

Parkinson’s Empowered Brain

March 4, 2022
Artwork March 1, 2022

Ingrid Hauff

What it Means to Live with Parkinson’s Disease

March 1, 2022
Artwork February 22, 2022

Laura Olmos

Mexican Doll

February 22, 2022
Artwork February 14, 2022

Bob Bernard

Back to Lawrencefield

February 14, 2022
Artwork February 14, 2022

Laura Olmos

Hope

February 14, 2022
Artwork October 26, 2021

Michele Keir

Husband

October 26, 2021
Artwork September 6, 2021

Michele Keir

The Rose of Sharon

September 6, 2021