Sandra Longmore began work on three paintings during a visit to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, for an artists’ retreat in January. The Washougal resident wasn’t quite sure how they would look when she was finished with them or what they would represent, but she was captivated by them nonetheless. She wasn’t sure why, but she knew they were going to be important.
Longmore finished two of the paintings in Mexico and completed the third after returning to the Pacific Northwest. But it wasn’t until March that she discovered the true purpose of the paintings and the connection between them.
“I didn’t know it was a series until I came home,” she said. “At first I thought I might wipe them and start over, but when I started to really look at them, I saw how they fit together.”
The three works of art, she says, tell a story about the COVID-19 pandemic.
“My eyes are really open because this is just not the way life used to be,” she said. “If you’re really a creative person, and you’re working with creative energy, you show what the generation or culture is feeling and experiencing. If you look at art from the Renaissance, or even back to the caveman days, it’s a reflection of that particular age.”
She’s quick to add that “she didn’t foresee” anything like the pandemic when she was painting, though.