AN ARTIST AND
A CHRISTIAN
Her murals adorn a church,
a school and more
By JASMINA WELLINGHOFF
Photography JANET ROGERS
A lot of people volunteer in their
church, but few can do what
Shawn Bridges has done. A
member of Trinity Baptist Church,
Bridges has transformed the children’s
ministry building into a pictorial Noah’s
ark by painting hundreds of life-size animals
all over the walls of the central
rotunda and along the hallways leading
to the classrooms.
The elephants, giraffes, zebras,
horses, koala bears and the entire colorful
menagerie are so realistically portrayed
that a child could get a good
zoology lesson right there without
ever going to the zoo. It took the artist
four months of nonstop work to complete
the project, often standing on
scaffolding for hours and taking home
the “bird panels” to complete at
night. Naturally, the birds are “flying
high” — two-story high, to be exact — so painting them as murals would
have been a bit unsafe for the painter.
Instead, she worked on panels which
were later affixed to the walls.
“This is my gift to my church,” says
Bridges, who didn’t charge a penny for
her work. “But it was also the most fun
thing I have ever done. The kids were so
involved. They kept coming to me, asking
questions.”
To make it even more fun, she snuck
in tiny images of mice, butterflies and
other small critters as special surprises
for the youngsters. One can easily
imagine a 5-year-old staring at a huge
elephant figure and suddenly crying
out, “Oh, look, there is a little mouse
by his foot!”
Not only that, the children even pat
the animals, says children’s pastor
Debbie Potter, who initiated the renovation
project.
“What Shawn has done has turned
into something far greater than anything
either one of us had imagined,”
adds Potter. “Every Sunday people of all
ages file through the center to admire her work. The congregation is so excited
that one of our own was able to do
something like this. We are probably
going to have the finest children’s center
in the nation.”
And certainly a unique one! How
many churches today can boast of having
original art on their walls? By the
time Bridges is done, another part of the
building will be covered with paintings
representing Bible stories featuring
human characters. As far as anyone
knows, this is the largest mural project in
the city.
Although she didn’t set out to
become a muralist, Bridges may soon
become known as one. In addition to her
Trinity work, she has recently completed
a wall-size picture of Dr. George
Washington Carver’s science lab for the
Carver Academy and is also the magician
who turned walls and floors of a flooddamaged
ranch house in San Marcos
into a picture perfect sight. In addition,
four of her early murals representing outdoor
activities adorn Colorado State
University in Pueblo, Colo., and a few
others are hidden from public view in private
homes.
But walls are only one of her “canvases.”
Besides creating the more traditional
kind that can be hung on the
wall, Bridges can paint or otherwise
artistically enhance just about anything,
from furniture to bathroom
sinks. In her dining room, for instance,
the table is covered from end to end
with a vivid canvas depicting an explosion
of fruits and foliage. Protected by
varnish, it serves as a “tablecloth”
when she entertains.
“It’s hard for me to tell when people
are finished eating their salads,” jokes
the hostess, but it’s easy to appreciate
her dilemma. The strong greens and
turquoise blues of the painting most
likely “swallow” any colorful stuff
placed on top of them. Turquoise is
also the color she chose for a large
sculptural arrangement of tree branches
that she painted and decorated with
glass pieces.
But it’s her “Chihuly chandelier”
that attracts the most attention. “I love
glass and I love Chihuly’s work, but I
can’t afford it,” explains Bridges. “So I
went to a glass studio and made my
own fake Chihuly.”
Consisting of a glass sheet suspended
from the ceiling and loaded with an
assortment of small glass objects, the “fake” is really a Bridges original.
Looking up from the table, the effect is
pleasing, as the light filtering through
the objects produces an underwater kind
of image.
Her impulse to add color and texture to
plain surfaces extends to all the rooms in
the house, but it’s the living room, which
doubles as her studio, that serves as the
main gallery. More than a dozen framed
paintings line the walls, including portraits
of her husband, Gary; son, Mark; and
daughter, Annella. Though the exhibit
changes as pieces are sold, the family portraits
stay put as does a print of the painting
she did in response to 9/11. The latter
is an image of God’s hands holding the
American flag and the survivors of the
deadly attack. (More about that later.)
The day we visited, she was putting
the finishing touches on a bright
meadow scene sitting on the easel, an
order from a Houston customer. As a
painter, she favors acrylics and a
frankly representational style. Florals,
landscapes, picturesque scenes and
portraits are all part of her portfolio. “I
love contemporary art,” she says, “but
I just don’t do it very well.”
A NEW DIRECTION
Although she learned to draw at
her grandmother’s knee and studied
commercial design at Baylor in the late ‘60s, Shawn Kingston, as she was then
known, married while still in college
and, after graduation, proceeded to
devote herself to domestic life.
Following Gary’s stint in the Air Force,
the couple settled in San Antonio,
Shawn’s hometown. It was her daughter’s
birth that moved Bridges to pick
up her brushes again. While she
delighted in recording her baby’s
beauty, her friends took notice of her
talent. Before long, they started asking
her to do portraits of their own kids,
and she gradually established a reputation
as a portraitist. Life was good as
Gary advanced in his career and the
children grew, but in 1985, the family
left it all behind to move to a small ski
resort in Colorado.
“I think we had a middle-life crisis,”
she says, only partially tongue-in-cheek. “We wanted to have an adventure.”
They opened a convenience store and a
gift shop in Cuchara, Colo., and for a
while, enjoyed “the simpler life” and the
great outdoors. That’s where Bridges first
discovered the joy of painting tables and
murals. While working as a waitress at the
Timbers restaurant in Cuchara, she came
up with the idea of decorating the tabletops
with a variety of scenes to save on
linen and laundry. Patrons loved it.
Emboldened, she added a mural depicting
a Wild West saloon and created “bear
chairs” for the porch. By then, she was the
artist in residence, selling some of her
paintings to vacationing skiers from all
over the United States.
When the resort closed, the Bridges
stayed on for 10 more years.
Eventually, though, the couple felt “adventured out” and returned to San
Antonio in 2000.
That was the beginning of a new
chapter. In short order, Bridges had two
experiences that led to an important
turning point in her life. While working
on the flood-damaged ranch house mentioned
above — her first project of such
a magnitude — the still-inexperienced
muralist fell prey to discouragement.
“I was way over my head,” she says. “I sat on the floor one day and cried and
said, ‘Please, God, help me.’ I have
always been a Christian and thought I
was giving my work to God, but that day
I gave the whole of it.”
Not only did she successfully complete
the patio mural, she now felt she had
found a new direction. Troubled by the
9/11 attack in 2001, Bridges painted the
aforementioned “September 11” piece
to express the belief that we are all in
God’s hands.
“Everybody wanted a copy of it,”recalls the artist. “It isn’t a very good
painting technically, but it’s a touching
one. It spoke to a lot of people struggling
through their own confusion and grief.”
Thanks to Bridges’ choir group, the
Son Shine Singers, 1,500 prints of the
image were made and sold to benefit
Baptist Child and Family Services. But
that wasn’t the end of it. The painter and
the entire choir eventually traveled to
Washington, D.C., to present the original
to the Pentagon Memorial Chapel,
where it still hangs today.
More recently, Bridges and friend
Annella Egbert also donated a copy to a
Manhattan fire station during a visit to
Ground Zero.
All these developments have brought
her greater visibility and a sense of purpose.
Three local galleries may have
turned her down, but that no longer
bothers her.
“That painting has given me a new
life,” says the amiable artist. “I used to
frantically paint what I thought people
wanted to buy. Now, I still paint what
people want when they commission it,
but otherwise I do what God wants me
to do. Once I decided on that, I suddenly
got a lot of work” |