September 6, 2010 8:05 AM

Preserving on Canvas a Vanishing Way of Life

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Mary Whyte is the artist of record of a changing world . . . a world she's captured in a style all her own, as Martha Teichner will now show us:


Mary Whyte arrived early enough to take Gary Douglas's picture, outside by his sign, before the rain really started coming down.

Douglas owns the Hi-way 50 Drive-In.

"OK, we're going to cut our music off now; I think it's time to get started with our feature for the night," he said.

The only movie theater left for miles around Lewisburg, Tenn., an honest-to-goodness "Last Picture Show," not much different from the way it was in the 1940s.

. . . which is why Mary Whyte is here.

For the last three-and-a-half years, Whyte has been traveling around the South painting its endangered species . . . holdouts, like Gary Douglas, whose way of life is disappearing.

"Has anybody every drawn you before?" she asked Douglas.

"No, this is a first," he replied.

Her subjects tend to be people nobody's ever drawn.

"It's always because there's a story that I think needs to be told, that all of these people are living a life that I think is unique and important," she explained.

The sketches, the quick watercolors, are just the beginning.

"Getting a likeness is the easy part," Whyte said. "Making a good painting that endures, that speaks forever (you hope), is the difficult part."

The first of such pictures, called "By a Thread," came after Mary Whyte saw a newspaper article about a mill closure. And one thing led to another . . . and another . . . and then another. She's up to 30 paintings now.

Whyte found one of the South's last funeral bands in Miami.

"And they came over one by one and leaned up against a tree and played for me," she said. "How wonderful is that?"

She pays her subjects a little for their time

"The oldest member that's still living that was in that band in the '20s, and he's I think close to 100 now, I'm told," Whyte said.

Whyte's final paintings are watercolor . . . yes, the same kind of paint you sloshed all over drawing paper in second grade, hard to believe.

"People are often surprised when they walk into my studio, and they say, This is it? I mean, it's basically a plastic tray with the colors around the edges and you add water to it."

For a couple of months each year, Mary Whyte leaves her home and studio near Charleston, S.C. She packs up her art supplies and her radio and moves into an old millworker's cottage upstate in the little town of Simpsonville.

"It's empty, so it means all I have to look at and think about are my paintings," she said. "So, all I do is paint and eat and sleep."

Every day, just before noon she goes next door to the home of Doug and Billie Hogg, her landlords.

What she finds is a feast in the making.

Doug Hogg was a supervisor at the local textile mill (like so many others, shut down now). But the routine remains.

Mrs. Hogg says grace …

"At noontime, on the dot, every day, you know, millworkers' time, Mrs. Hogg serves a colossal homemade warm, hot, dinner," Whyte said.

"As we say, dig in!" Mrs. Hogg commands.

"It's three generations here that meet daily for meals, that all work in the garden, all work to grow the produce in the garden and to raise the bees here," Whyte said.

It was because of their bees that Whyte sought them out in the first place, early on in her project. Doug Hogg and his daughter, Jane, don't say much as they tend the hives. They don't need to.

(CBS)

Jane is captured in Mary Whyte's painting, "The Beekeeper's Daughter" (left).

"The wearing of the white, the whiteness of these shapes, this smoke and the fact that they smoke and they move slowly, to me is dreamy," Whyte said.

Eventually, the Greenville County Museum of Art will exhibit Whyte's work. Many of her completed paintings are being stored there now in the frames her husband made by hand. They were hung for us to see.

Whyte showed us her painting of Algie Varn: "He has spent his entire life crabbing and oystering, and he was kind enough to take me out onto his boat. That day, about one-third 3 of the traps had been poached or vandalized. So I watched this man vacillate that day between anguish, despair and rage."

The next time she called him, he had gone out of business.

She showed us another painting she'd started in New Orleans: "I wanted to find a shoeshine man. Eventually I found my way to Mr. Noah here, who was in one of the big hotels on Canal Street.
And he's been doing this, shining shoes, since he was five years old.

"Everyone I ask, 'So, why do you do this?' And they say, 'Because it's all I've ever known.'"

Near Bishopville, S.C., Whyte stopped a cotton picker who could only pose for a minute or two, because he had to get back to work. Just down the road, at a diner, she met the subjects of the painting she calls "Fifteen-Minute Break."

"What they do is they clean industrial ovens," Whyte explained. "They're tired. This is for them a 16-hour day. That's what I found so interesting and meaningful and attractive to do this painting, is that I wanted this absolute weariness of these men."

And in "The Lovers," it was her Berea, Ky., quilter's skin that fascinated her.

"The skin has this wonderful translucent quality where you can see, particularly as a person ages, and I believe that the hands are truly a person's resume of their life," Whyte said.

In Mary Whyte's hands, the resume of a region is brought to life . . . with a plastic tray, some color and water.

The exhibit "Mary Whyte: Working South" will open March 2, 2011 and run through October 2, 2011 at the Greenville County Museum of Art in Greenville, S.C.


For more info:
Greenville County Museum of Art

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by mayfowler September 9, 2010 7:53 PM EDT
My husband and I love our "Sunday Morning" ritual of muffins and coffee. I especially am delighted when there is a segment such as the one on Mary Whyte. I have been doing watercolors for the past ten years and felt so inadequate when I saw the work she has done and heard about the subject she chose. Having a theme and doing the research and following through are, in my mind, keys to being a good artist. My color today is "green" with envy.
Reply to this comment
by UrbanSculptures September 9, 2010 12:14 PM EDT
I was stunned by Mary's photographic quality work, truly amazing!
I think it is extremely difficult to get photo quality paintings like these, it's so much easier to be lazy and do "modern abstract" or "impressionist" work, but I consider both of those to be excuses for lack of skills and talent.

I had tried a painting class long ago but it didn't fair well, but later I took up sculpting.
Similarly to Mary's preserving what is being lost, I work in Victorian, Art Deco and Louis Sullivan styles, and my models are of those sculptures found on 19th century brick urban building facades in cities such as New York and Chicago.
Mary and I each have our media, and similarly preserving what is being lost.
Randall
urbansculptures.com
Reply to this comment
by conniemck September 7, 2010 9:57 PM EDT
My husband and I had the pleasure of meeting Ms. Whyte a couple of years ago. She came to our small southern town to work on the project you featured this past Sunday. Not only is she greatly talented, she is also one of the nicest people we ever met!
Reply to this comment
by pattiwatti September 7, 2010 9:36 AM EDT
Oh, my goodness!! If only I could see my granddaughter (age 13) watch your show on Sunday morning and have her make the comment, "Your show is awesome!", I would be so trilled.
Reply to this comment
by nelson_photographer September 6, 2010 5:14 AM EDT
Thanks to everyone at CBS who brought this story to us.
What beautiful, sensitive, creative, caring, persons must work for CBS Sunday Morning.
Best wishes to all for good health and happiness
Mary White is an ANGEEL!!
Reply to this comment
by E_Burke September 5, 2010 9:57 PM EDT
These paintings are absolutely incredible -- from their inspiration, to their creation, to their beauty. Their is a definite Rockwell feel, but the scenic details and likenesses of the people in the paintings sets Ms Whyte's work apart. I also found them somewhat reminiscent of the works of John Falter.

Despite these similarities, Ms Whyte's work is distinctly her own. And to think she achieves such sublime renderings using water color.

Oh, if I could, I would take one of each of her paintings just to look at them daily and marvel at such richness.
Reply to this comment
by nelson_photographer September 6, 2010 5:09 AM EDT
I agree with your commets so much. I appreciate your mention of John Falter. I had not thought of him in 30 or more years but I can't wait to look up his art again !!!!!!!!
Mary Whyte is an ANGEL !!
and my thanks to everyone at CBS for bringing this story to the world.
God bless EVERYONE
by verycold September 5, 2010 3:33 PM EDT
I saw this segment early this morning and cannot get the paintings out of my head. I think the journey to capture what once was is so very important. I grew up in the northeast and have lived in the south and southwest and now the Midwest. In my brain I take these pictures of what I know won't be here for very long as well. I honor our history no matter how painfully difficult as many of these labor intensive jobs are.

Mary you are amazing.
Reply to this comment
by jechrist September 5, 2010 2:23 PM EDT
totally inspirational!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by UrbanSculptures September 6, 2010 5:27 PM EDT
I was stunned by Mary's photographic quality work, truly amazing!
I think it is extremely difficult to get photo quality paintings like these, it's so much easier to be lazy and do "modern abstract" or "impressionist" work, but I consider both of those to be excuses for lack of skills and talent.

I had tried a painting class long ago but it didn't fair well, but later I took up sculpting.
Similarly to Mary's preserving what is being lost, I work in Victorian, Art Deco and Louis Sullivan styles, and my models are of those sculptures found on 19th century brick urban building facades in cities such as New York and Chicago.
Mary and I each have our media, and similarly preserving what is being lost.
Randall
urbansculptures.com
.
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