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" Reiboldt's Creek " Sally Everhardus
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In kindergarten and first grade, Sally Everhardus and her friend Susan were going to be illustrator and author of children’s books when they “grew up.” Although Sally hasn’t seen Susan since they graduated from 3rd grade, she has pursued art and craft throughout her life.
A graduate of the University of Michigan’s School of Art with a minor in art and architectural history, Sally supported herself as an illustrator while putting herself through school in the dark ages before computer-generated charts, graphs and sine waves. Her artistic masterpieces like mapping aggressive behaviors between adult catfish and drug uptake channels of ara-A may be found in doctoral dissertation archives.
An avid seamstress since the age of four when she learned to sew on her grandmother’s treadle machine, she built costumes for and performed in theatre productions in SE Michigan. A devotee of portable projects, she from time to time knits, crochets, stitches crewel and needlepoint, makes baskets, refinishes furniture, makes mosaic garden objects and clothing and repairs her aging wardrobe. Major capital projects have included roofing, electrical work and installing hardwood floors. In collegiate financial extremis, she rebuilt the engine on her beloved MG Midget twice. Primary obsessions outside of art have been travel, playing polo, riding dressage and working in her garden. She recently obtained her Master Gardener certification and designed the edible demonstration garden at the Peninsula Research Station in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin.
Her career has taken her from Ann Arbor to the San Francisco Bay area, western Illinois, St. Louis and Door County. Positions have included sales and management for a division of Xerox to school and theatre fundraising and management of a large arts funding organization and an art school. With friends spread across the country, Sally pursues her original goal sporadically and vicariously though exhibition attendance, reading voraciously and painting in watercolor and pastel, especially when the weather is good. In the winter she uses pastels en plein air outfitted with Bob Cratchit gloves.
She has exhibited at Paint Box Gallery, Peninsula Art School, Missouri Watercolor Society’s annual invitational, the Appleton Art Center, The Bridge, Charlene’s Gallery Ten and at street fairs. She was recently invited to be an exhibiting artist at the new Jack Richeson Gallery in Kimberly, Wisconsin. Her work is in collections in Missouri, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Indiana, Illinois, Florida, California, Wisconsin and Michigan.
She currently shares her life with Suzy Q the ADHD canine poster child and Trudy McNasty, the cat who only has eyes for her.
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