Art Becomes Her
From her home in Sheboygan, Wis., Isabel Tidmarsh Little 鈥55 reflects on 30 years of teaching success, an exciting first job as a staff artist for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, Mo., and a long and happy marriage that produced three children.
鈥淲hen you live through history, you wish you鈥檇 paid more attention,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 84. That鈥檚 kind of a shock, I鈥檒l tell you.鈥
In the last few years, to adjust to some big life changes, she turned to an old passion.
Little lost her husband Richard 鈥淒ick鈥 Little M.A. 鈥69 in 2017, a few years after the couple moved to Sheboygan to be near their children. In search of an outlet to help her adjust and heal, she found just that through the city鈥檚 Senior Center and membership in Sheboygan Visual Artists, a nonprofit collective of more than 125 local visual artists and patrons.
Little signed up for a class in watercolor painting at the Senior Center. 鈥淚 hadn鈥檛 seriously painted for 50 years. Watercolor is challenging. If you make a mistake, you can鈥檛 fix it.鈥
Though she made mistakes, the weekly classes became a ritual and an escape. Last fall, she had an exhibition at the University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan, showing recent watercolor paintings and some prints she made at Bradley.
Little worked her way through the university in the 1950s, earning a bachelor of fine arts while concentrating on printmaking and ceramics. Her Bradley experience was a world away from that of today鈥檚 students.
She bought coffee for a nickel a cup at The Wigwam, and like all women students, had her outfits inspected by Olive B. White, beloved professor emeritus of English and dean of women. 鈥淪he made an appointment with every female freshman,鈥 Little said. 鈥淪he checked our attire 鈥 we all wore pencil skirts, saddle shoes and bobby socks. Our skirts were supposed to reach our socks.鈥
Straight out of college, Little worked at Hallmark for two years at the company鈥檚 headquarters. 鈥淚 loved the job. We were in a five-story building, very modern. But I missed home.鈥
So she took the train back to Peoria, and soon met her husband.
The couple, who were married 58 years, bought a house and land in Chillicothe, Ill., and raised their children. Dick taught junior high and high school in Peoria, and Little鈥檚 career included a 10-year stint as an art teacher and 20 years in early childhood education.
Though she鈥檇 yearned to continue creating art after college, the demands of teaching and raising a family made it too difficult. 鈥淚 always wanted to do more, but never had time. During those years, you鈥檙e a kitchen table artist.鈥
No longer confined to her kitchen table, Little relishes her weekly watercolor painting class and the friendships she鈥檚 found there. 鈥淭he class is on Tuesday, and I don鈥檛 know what I鈥檇 do without it,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 need someone to critique my paintings.鈥
— Mary Brolley
ABOVE: The image is of a ceramic top coffee table Isabel Little made at Bradley in ceramics class. The walnut table was made by students in a Bradley woodworking class in the old Duryea building (now the site of Heuser Art Center).