Jamaica Gleaner

Heart-shaped art brings love, hope to virus-ravaged hotspots

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DONALD VERGER has been putting heart into his art during the pandemic. And images of those intricate hearts made from vibrant sea glass are flowing back to schools and hospitals that have been hard hit by COVID-19.

“The hearts hit a sweet spot for people,” Verger said. “People love sea glass, the colour, the patterns.”

Across the country, many artists find themselves struggling during the pandemic, but they are also finding ways to give back during a health crisis that has claimed more than 465,000 lives in the United States.

Verger’s efforts represent his small but colourful contributi­on to the effort to bring people a smile, or maybe a moment of calm and peace, amid the isolation of the pandemic.

He has sent about 25,000 post cards of his hearts and landscape photograph­y to schools and hospitals. He delivers them at 1,000 or 2,500 at a time. Employers and teachers give them to staff, students and patients.

Recently, he has donated at least 10,000 with LOVE superimpos­ed on them. Another 10,000 had HOPE superimpos­ed on them.

SENSE OF HOPE

“It seems like a great privilege to do something that supports happiness and some sense of hope,” said Verger, whose studio is in Falmouth, Maine.

In Boston, Shriners Hospital Administra­tor Eileen Skinner was handing out cards with hearts with the word LOVE to more than 400 workers, ahead

of Valentine’s Day.

“You have to be in a healthcare organisati­on to understand the COVID fatigue,”Skinner said.“It’s just encouragin­g to the staff that somebody is thinking of them.”

Verger, 72, grew up in New York but considers himself a New Englander. Living in Massachuse­tts, where he raised his family, he founded the Children’s Discovery Museum and Science Discovery Museum in New England, in the town of Acton, Massachuse­tts.

As a photograph­er, he’s renowned for his stunning images of landscapes and lighthouse­s in New England. His best known photo is ‘Dawn of Peace’, which depicts sea smoke greeting the sunrise on a subzero morning on Thompson Lake in Otisfield, Maine.

He merged his photograph­y with colourful sea glass that he began collecting on the coast of California. He began arranging the sea glass into images reminiscen­t of a Monet or Renoir painting.

His first donations came about after a brush with a tornado in Missouri while photograph­ing the dramatic storms in 2011. The storm chasers became the ones being chased by a massive tornado that left the town of Joplin, Missouri. More than 150 people were killed.

After returning to Maine, he put some of his images meant to soothe and to calm onto postcards with a message and the name Joplin. All told, he sent about 25,000 of them to the Red Cross, schools and other organisati­ons.

During the pandemic, he has sent post cards to schools and hospitals. He recently donated to Northern Light Mercy Hospital in Portland and other facilities, in addition to Boston Shriners Hospital for Children.

Skinner and Verger first met in Maine, when he donated framed photos to be used at Mercy Hospital when she was CEO.

“Donald is a warm and generous person,” she said. “He shares what he does best.”

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Donald Verger arranges sea glass in the shape of a heart. After photograph­ing his art, Verger donates photos and cards to schools and hospitals as a way of giving back during the pandemic.
AP PHOTOS Donald Verger arranges sea glass in the shape of a heart. After photograph­ing his art, Verger donates photos and cards to schools and hospitals as a way of giving back during the pandemic.
 ??  ?? Artist Donald Verger poses with his images of sea glass, landscapes and flowers.
Artist Donald Verger poses with his images of sea glass, landscapes and flowers.

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