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Small
Town Zen
Being aware of what’s in your own front yard
Number 2:
Naivete in
Florala, Alabama
by Johnny Stucco
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Woodie
paint a mural? We’ll bet he would.
Florala is one of those places like Texarkana
that straddles state lines and has a name cobbled together from both
hosts. In the unlikely event you are ever asked where Florala is,
you can answer “It’s just a stone’s throw from the highest
elevation in Florida.*” The two states
involved here even share a Lake (Lake Jackson), but Florala’s downtown
is firmly inside Alabama territory and downtown is where you will
find the murals painted by the artist simply known as Woodie.
World-famous naïve artist “Grandma” Moses and French painter Henri
Rousseau (how do you say naïve in French?) may currently be more famous
than Woodie, but that may change. Our attempts at contacting the Florala
chamber met with a message recorded in that warm Alabama lilt. |
Woodie's "Plowman
with Mule"
TE photo, January 2011 |
The simple bold
colors painted on panels are starting to fade, so it was decided to
make them (at least these two) the second entry in Small
Town Zen. In the first mural a plowman is shown with his mule.
Judging by his straight legs, the mule is giving it his all, allowing
the plowman to relax his arms. Four birds fly overhead, attempting
to steal seed (if the tiller man is planting), or feast on exposed
insects (if the furrows are just being made ready). Or perhaps the
birds are vultures waiting for the plowman to drop dead. As art, it’s
open to interpretation. |
"Kites"
TE photo, January 2011 |
The second sample
of Woodie’s work appears to be a synchronized kite-flying exhibition
with five bowlegged Floralan boys and five Floralan girls taking part.
Synchronized kite flying, although not yet an Olympic sport, is not
as easy as it looks here. Easily visible from Florala’s main thoroughfare,
“Kites” is installed on a building just 1,250 feet north of the Florida
state line. The white fence panels are not part of the mural.
Florala may be a little off the beaten path, but it’s a charming town
with several interesting 19th Century buildings. One of these is the
town's old bank which now houses city offices and the chamber. Florala
may soon become known as the place where Woodie got his start. If
anyone has information on the artist, we’d enjoy sharing it with our
readers. Please send to my boss at history@texasescapes.com with Florala,
Alabama in the subject line.
© John
Troesser
March 2011
*Lakewood,
Florida, aka Britton Hill is officially the highest elevation in Florida.
Among all of the high points in the U.S., Britton Hill is the “lowest
high point” which sounds a bit like being the world’s shortest tall
person. |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and vintage or recent photos, please contact
us. |
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