USA TODAY US Edition

COVID-19 survivor, 91, paints a watercolor each day

- Allison Ward

COLUMBUS Ohio – Some might see Bonnie Bowen’s whimsical watercolor­s – of which she’s painted at least one a day since the pandemic began – as cute, quaint, or nice.

Dr. Amy Acton sees them as lifesavers.

“Things like this are what get us through these dark days,” said Acton, former director of the Ohio Department of Health. “She saved others in the pandemic. They’re whimsical, yes, but you can read in the comments (on Facebook) that she saved people.”

You made my day again. Thank you 100 times over for giving us smiles.

I can feel pure joy when I look at this painting. What a difference you have made in our lives, dear lady.

What started as a simple challenge from a daughter to keep her 91-year-old mother engaged with family and friends through painting a picture daily to share on social media has grown into a following in which fans eagerly await Bowen’s artwork post each morning.

More than 200 paintings later, Bowen’s fan club includes Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, “Today” co-anchor Hoda Kotb, and thousands of strangers nationwide.

“I get up every morning and I can’t wait to see what she created,” said Dr. Rustin Moore, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine at Ohio State University, who is the subject of one of the paintings.

He said he was at first drawn to Bowen’s pieces because early on in the pandemic, the watercolor­s focused on health care workers.

Bowen, who lives in Upper Arlington, Ohio when not in Florida during colder months, has also depicted familiar pandemic scenes, such as mask-making, people singing from apartment windows and what it’s now like to go to the grocery store.

Now, she’s drawing all sorts of subjects, from seasonal themes to her family and friends and simple pleasures in life, such as going to the beach or sharing a glass of wine with friends – or by yourself after a long day.

In fact, Bowen’s love of a good glass of wine was the catalyst for the project.

Throughout her life, Bowen has created art – painting a mural when she

was in third grade, sketching cartoonlik­e characters as a young mother, or taking watercolor classes.

However, in the early 2000s, she began drawing what she refers to as “the wine girls.” She’s painted them and various scenes on wine glasses and had her drawings printed on calendars and aprons to send to friends.

“The wine girls, I’d paint whenever I felt like drawing, maybe once a day, whenever I got an idea,” Bowen said. “Like a girl walking in the rain with wine or walking on the beach with wine.”

Those figures are very similar to the ones she’s been drawing during the pandemic, but many of her more recent paintings have deeper meaning.

“One of my favorites is this ‘flatten the curve’ one,” Bowen said, holding up a 5-inch-by-8-inch sheet showing a woman bent over in a contorted position resembling the curve – but she is reaching for a glass of vino.

Agreeing with Acton, these quirky doodles have meant a lot more than just entertainm­ent for both Bowen and her fans, said her daughter Betsy

Hampton.

In the beginning, they served as a connection between Bowen and her family, with her texting daily a photo of a new drawing to Hampton, who would share it on her personal Facebook page. Soon, though, Hampton realized others might enjoy them, so she created a page for the artwork.

“We want to make people happy,” Hampton said. “With the election, COVID and the flu, good God in heaven, we need something light.”

Now, nearly 4,000 people follow Bowen’s daily drawings, with each one receiving dozens of comments. Her story has been told in media outlets nationwide. She received a call from the governor praising her work, and she’s since started selling prints as well as masks, shirts, greeting cards and calendars with her work on them for charity.

“When Mom was diagnosed with COVID, we had over 200,000 prayer requests,” Hampton said. “It worked.”

Bowen was diagnosed with the coronaviru­s in early September and was very sick for two to three weeks.

Hampton said she knew her mother was on the mend when she got out of bed and finished four paintings, including a lovely scene of three people and a dog riding off into the sunset in a Jeeplike vehicle. Bowen titled it “Road to Recovery.”

Though the survival odds were stacked against the nonagenari­an, Bowen’s recovery didn’t surprise Acton.

“She’s become this unifying force in the community,” Acton said. “Acts of kindness, in science, we know the health benefits – it’s good for her, it’s good for us.”

Acton said she cherishes the “precious” painting Bowen did of her and her daughter and knows others had similar reactions to pieces that spoke to them.

“It’s no small thing,” Acton said. “It might be all we have. Bonnie is the epitome of pulling people together.”

 ??  ?? Bonnie Bowen paints her 8-year-old granddaugh­ter, Angel Bowen, while her daughter, Betsy Hampton, chooses paintings for the calendars they are creating.
Bonnie Bowen paints her 8-year-old granddaugh­ter, Angel Bowen, while her daughter, Betsy Hampton, chooses paintings for the calendars they are creating.
 ?? PHOTOS BY GAELEN MORSE/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Hampton holds up her mother’s painting of emergency workers striking the O-H-I-O pose.
PHOTOS BY GAELEN MORSE/USA TODAY NETWORK Hampton holds up her mother’s painting of emergency workers striking the O-H-I-O pose.

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