Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

NH artist finishes out a year of pandemic ‘daily doodles’

- By Holly Ramer

WESTMORELA­ND, N.H. — Much like the round clock faces, gears and planets that often populate his artwork, Robert Seaman has come full circle.

Seaman, 88, has been drawing since he was a boy, and at age 60, left a real estate career to pursue his hobby profession­ally. But it took the coronaviru­s pandemic to fully return him to his passion.

“As a kid, I kept lurching between being a loner and being an extrovert,” he said. “But in my introvert phase, I would love to go up to my room where I had a drawing table kind of desk and I’d spend hours up there drawing pictures. That’s what I’m doing now.”

Tuesday marked one year since Seaman started churning out “daily doodles” from his small, one-room apartment at the Maplewood Assisted Living facility in Westmorela­nd, New Hampshire. He spends about six hours a day working on his intricate, fanciful illustrati­ons, starting with pencil sketches and finishing with ink, colored pencil and watercolor.

“After a long life, I’m back doing what I did when I was 11 years old,” he said. “And it’s great, I love it. I’m so lucky that I can do this.”

Seaman moved in to Maplewood just two weeks before the pandemic restrictio­ns cut residents off from the outside world. For many months, they couldn’t leave their rooms. It was only recently that they were allowed to interact in hallways and other common areas without masks.

“The first thought I had was to just do some kind of dark stuff that reflected the nature of the confinemen­t that we were experienci­ng and the difficulti­es that were created by this pandemic,” he said. “Then it just started to grow, and I thought it would be interestin­g to do one a day.”

He started sending the doodles to his daughter, Robin Hayes, and other friends and family. Hayes then shared them on Facebook, and as interest grew, began offering the originals and prints for sale on Etsy, with half the proceeds going to charities, including a COVID-19 relief fund, a homeless shelter and an organizati­on that helps refugees.

As the days passed, Seaman’s art got a bit brighter in both theme and appearance.

Some pieces showcase his fascinatio­n with science fiction, while others portray whimsical animals or sly humor — #131, “Portraits of a Shy Family,” depicts framed paintings of the backs of heads. Robots carrying purple flags march across the page. A brain is sandwiched between two burger buns. A much-loved cat, Piper, shows up in all kinds of scenes.

Seaman, who has been fully vaccinated since January, says he’ll “probably kick the bucket” before he runs out of ideas.

“I might be watching something on television, and someone will have a picture on the wall that will give me an idea. Or things just pop into my head. When I go to sleep at night, for a few minutes I try to think of some new ideas,” he said. “When I get stuck, I’ll just start drawing an object and it’s like word associatio­n.”

Craig and Sandra Fox, of Deerfield, bought Doodles #13, 271 and 274 after hearing about Seaman on the radio and getting added to his daily email list.

“During the pandemic, a lot of our normal ability to get out and have contact with people was diminished, so to be able to get some output or something that isn’t an advertisin­g flyer or newsletter on a daily basis was cool,” Craig Fox said.

Sandra Fox, who once stared at a painting in a museum so long that a guard teased her about “casing the joint,” said she loves how much there is to see in Seaman’s drawings.

“They are what they are to me, I have the same feelings, but I see more every time,” she said. “I could look at them for half an hour and see many, many things.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? Artist Robert Seaman holds up the 365th daily doodle sketch in his room at an assisted living facility Monday in Westmorela­nd, New Hampshire.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP Artist Robert Seaman holds up the 365th daily doodle sketch in his room at an assisted living facility Monday in Westmorela­nd, New Hampshire.

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