Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Bay Area artist spreads the love through her ‘heartwork’

- By Janie McCauley

ALAMEDA, Calif. — Deirdre Freeman walks the mile from her home, lugging a large, colorful painting and tote bag with her hammer and nails. Her destinatio­n is a telephone pole at a busy intersecti­on, where she will hang her largest “heartwork” painting yet.

Her goal is simple: to spread smiles and some much-needed love to the masses through this 18-by-24-inch acrylic on canvas, which features a red heart shape over whimsical designs — typical of the paintings she has been sharing in public places.

“Hopefully it stays here for a little while,” she says. “Sometimes cars will beep and wave when they see me doing it.”

She is recognized around town, too. “Oh, you’re the heart lady,” people tell her.

This project began two years ago with Freeman cutting out small paper heart prints of her work, writing messages on the backs, pinning them to trees around town and sending them all over the world. Some 6,500 hearts made it to places like Italy, France, Portugal and Japan.

Now, she paints larger pieces. Freeman has hung more than 120 heartworks, each of them taking between one and four hours to finish. She dreams of having her art on billboards.

A speech pathologis­t who stepped away from her profession 12 years ago to raise her two children, Freeman always wanted to be an artist but the timing wasn’t right until recently.

At 50, she is overjoyed to make a difference in someone’s day, week or month, to put a smile on a face or simply provide a sweet distractio­n from the challenges of everyday life, especially during the coronaviru­s pandemic. One man told her he was suicidal when he encountere­d a heartwork that pulled him from that debilitati­ng, dark space. A mom shared how her young son saw Freeman’s paintings on poles and how the love they projected made him feel safe in his community.

She never asked formal permission from the city of Alameda to do this project — but nobody has objected or stopped her yet. She posts heartworks-in-progress on her Facebook page with a simple message, “for the poles.”

“Sometimes I hide them in little surprise places,” she says. Occasional­ly she shares a photo clue on social media to see who might find one first in this closeknit East Bay suburb of San Francisco.

She has work that stayed put on a pole for more than 18 months, while other paintings have disappeare­d in just a few days. Some are taken — in fact, she saw one painting on a porch in her neighborho­od. She accepts that, realizing her work has likely resonated with someone in a meaningful way.

One piece at the end of her street now has a friend, too. A child added a painting that hangs beneath one of hers, with the message, “Be awesome.”

“My happiest part of this is there are children and others who are starting to put things up,” Freeman says. “It’s starting a love and kindness movement, which is what we need.”

 ?? JANIE MCCAULEY/AP ?? Artist Deirdre Freeman hangs her artwork on a telephone pole April 13 in Alameda, California. Freeman has hung over 120 pieces of artwork on poles around the city.
JANIE MCCAULEY/AP Artist Deirdre Freeman hangs her artwork on a telephone pole April 13 in Alameda, California. Freeman has hung over 120 pieces of artwork on poles around the city.

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