Morning Sun

Former officer, Midland resident’s art exhibit features portraits of homeless

- By Riley Kelley

LUDINGTON » What compels a former police officer — once tasked with “cleaning up” the homeless situation in downtown Ann Arbor — to devote his time to humanizing and documentin­g the lives of those very people through art?

Compassion had a lot to do with it, according to Quill Redpath, a retired officer with the Ann Arbor Police Department officer whose first-ever art exhibit, “Once I Was Like You,” is now on display at the Ludington Area Center for the Arts.

During his time with the department, Redpath nurtured dreams of bringing art into his work. He hoped to take a sketch artist class at Northweste­rn University while he was still in uniform, but he wasn’t given approval from the department, the Ludington Daily News reports.

“I always wanted to be an artist, ever since I was a kid, but I was never encouraged to be an artist,” Redpath said.

And yet, at age 80, he found his way. And the work he did in Ann Arbor is at the heart of every work on the walls at the arts center.

“Once I Was Like You” is full of charcoal portraits of homeless people Redpath encountere­d during his years in law enforcemen­t. It features about 25 portraits, and Redpath knows the stories behind all of them.

Redpath was charged with managing issues associated with Ann Arbor’s homeless population, from public intoxicati­on and disorderly conduct to loitering.

The city saw an influx of homeless people when Redpath was on the force from 1967 to 1992, and he believes that’s partly due to deinstitut­ionalizati­on, when state psychiatri­c hospitals closed en masse, releasing individual­s with mental health issues into the world, often with nowhere to go.

Redpath’s “beat” included the entirety of downtown Ann Arbor, about 15 miles all told. He walked that beat every day for five years, and during that time he met a wide variety of people. He encountere­d brilliant musicians, decorated veterans from various conflicts, artists — even an aerospace engineer who would “spend all day in the library writing these complicate­d formulas out, but he’d never talk to anybody.”

Redpath, however, enjoys talking, and that’s what he did with the people he encountere­d. He heard their stories, learned about their lives and set out to offer them whatever help he could.

In talking to the homeless people in his area, Redpath quickly realized that “cleaning up” the situation was going to be a big job. Many of the displaced individual­s had medical, dental and psychiatri­c needs that had to be met, and Redpath did what he could to help.

“Eventually I had a pharmacist that worked for me, so I could get medication for some of these people. I got a dentist working for me, who would pull teeth. I had a physician who worked with me too, and he’d see people if they really needed help,” he said. “I had it pretty well organized.”

While on the beat, Redpath learned to see the similariti­es, not the difference­s, between himself and the hundreds of homeless people he met.

“They’re just like us,” he said. “The name of the show is ‘Once I Was Like You,’ and I can guarantee that each of these people, at one point in their life, were just like us.

“We have the same problems — some of them we do a good job of handling, some we don’t do a good job of handling — and they’re in the same boat. Some are alcoholics, some are addicted to drugs, some are mentally ill.”

Redpath found a kindred spirit in social worker Gae Winn, who worked in the downtown Ann Arbor area at the time. Winn could facilitate transfers to treatment programs for substance abuse and other ailments, aiding in Redpath’s quest to help the people in his charge.

“We started working together, and she knows a lot of these people that I’ve drawn,” he said.

When Redpath retired in 1992, he said he “bawled his eyes out.” He’d developed a “lot of feelings for those folks.”

 ?? RILEY KELLEY — LUDINGTON DAILY NEWS VIA AP ?? Artist and former police officer Quill Redpath gestures toward one of the portraits from his exhibit, “Once I Was Like You,” Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022 in Ludington, Mich. The exhibit features charcoal drawings of homeless people he helped while on the force with the Ann Arbor Police. It features about 25portrait­s, and Redpath knows the stories behind all of them.
RILEY KELLEY — LUDINGTON DAILY NEWS VIA AP Artist and former police officer Quill Redpath gestures toward one of the portraits from his exhibit, “Once I Was Like You,” Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022 in Ludington, Mich. The exhibit features charcoal drawings of homeless people he helped while on the force with the Ann Arbor Police. It features about 25portrait­s, and Redpath knows the stories behind all of them.

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