February 22, 2009
Uneeda artist paints with photographic detail
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Linda Charles Stone once painted a yellow lily blossom with such detail that an onlooker asked what she had glued to the painting, referring to the droplets of water on the bloom's petals. "I told them, 'Look at it closely; it's just paint!'"

Her daughter, Sheila Bias, laughs and describes her mother as "blind as a bat." Stone admits she sometimes uses a flashlight and a magnifying glass to paint because without her glasses her vision is 20/1000.

On a recent visit to her daughter's home, this onlooker would never have known that Stone has any trouble seeing anything. Her images are clear and brilliant, with a depth of color that leaps from the paper.

"I have slight vision impairment," she said, smiling, "so I see colors usually before I see objects. You know, that's where the depth comes from, the push and pull of the color. I just love color. My goal is to communicate my feelings, my love of color and of life experiences to others through my painted images."

Stone's studio and home are in Uneeda, just outside of Madison. Growing up in the southern coalfields limited her exposure to fine art. But after graduating from high school, she moved to Virginia and worked in metropolitan Washington, D.C., where she explored a new world of art. She has honed her skills through classes, workshops and professional training.

"There were times in elementary school, especially around the holidays, when I would deliberately misbehave so the teacher would make me stay in for recess. My punishment was to finish a certain number of colored decorations or cutouts to be placed in the windows and around the room," Stone recalled.

"What punishment! I did not have paints and brushes, so the old-fashioned Christmas coloring books and crayons were my favorite gifts."

Stone spends more time painting since retiring from Boone County schools, where she worked as executive secretary to the superintendent. Her colleagues in the schools system encouraged her artistic endeavors.

"My old boss, Gary Sumpter, the superintendent of schools in Boone County, knew that one of the school board members was redoing the old bank building in Danville. He asked for the old flooring, and made easels out of that beautiful oak," she said. She has a dozen large and three small easels embellished with brass plaques bearing her name.

Stone started with oils in the early 1980s, but it wasn't until she discovered watercolors that her excitement about painting began.

"The late Eleanor Legg of Charleston was of great encouragement to me," Stone said. "She taught me a few beginning techniques in watercolor, but more important than her teaching ability was the confidence she had in my approach to painting. Eleanor talked me into entering my first competition, which was successful. Her response was, 'I told you so.' Anyone who knew Eleanor knows that's exactly what she would have said."

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