OXFORD — When Nora Roundtree had a debilitating and life-changing stroke nearly 20 years ago, doctors didn’t think she would come out of her coma, let alone walk or regain the fine motor skills needed to create art.

Come Sunday, the Oxford resident will be one of 50 artists showcased at the annual Moore Park Art Show scheduled from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the South Paris park at the corner of Route 26 and Park Street. Roundtree will have her paintings and dolls on display and available for purchase.

On Monday, Roundtree gives a tour of her Jenny Lane home. The re-upholstered love seats in the living room and black throw pillows decorated with white skulls and hot pink stripes down the side were done by her. A glass display case serves as a resting spot for the dolls she’s created — from elves to fairies to mermaids to “Walking Dead”-inspired zombies. Some of the dolls’ heads, which Roundtree hand paints, as well as creating their 3-D noses and eyelashes, rest on the coffee table. To demonstrate her process, she pulls out a strip of black and brightly striped fabric she uses for the eyelashes and makes a cutting motion with her fingers. 

Roundtree lives with her longtime partner, Tim Patrick, who got together with her after she had a stroke in 1996 at age 32. The stroke was brought on by the use of diet pills, he said, explaining that she was conscious about her weight because she had been a model since she was 18. Roundtree was in a coma for three months following the stroke.

“They didn’t think she was going to live,” Patrick said of Roundtree’s doctors.

She was fed intravenously through a feeding tube in her abdomen while she was unconscious, he said. Roundtree pulled up her tank top and showed the round, indented scar, still visible on her stomach.

Advertisement

As a result of the stroke, Roundtree lost her speech, the use of her right arm (she was right-handed) and she couldn’t walk. It took her a year to learn how to walk again, first using a wheelchair, then a walker and next, a cane. Now she has a leg brace and walks with a limp. She also had three grand mal seizures after the stroke, from which she bit a good chunk of her tongue off during the first one. Luckily, Patrick was there to help her. She was later put on anti-seizure medications and hasn’t had one since 1999.

“Thank God — I don’t want to go through that again,” Patrick said. “It’s the worse experience of my life.”

For the most part, talking is extremely difficult for Roundtree, who points to her head, indicating the right side of her brain doesn’t work correctly. She indicated with a talking motion with her left hand that prior to the stroke, she was one Chatty Kathy.

When asked about the struggle to relearn how to walk and become left-handed after the stroke, she replied clearly, “Pfft, what the f–k.”

That statement had Patrick recall a conversation with Roundtree’s neurologist in the late 1990s.

“Her neurologist said to me … ‘When you have a stroke like that, the words that come back to you are the ones you said a lot because you don’t put in a lot of effort,’” Patrick said, laughing.

Advertisement

Roundtree shakes her head and laughs, agreeing that she dropped a lot of “f-bombs” before the life-altering event.

But her art blossomed and grew after the stroke. Before, she mostly sketched in charcoal and wrote and read poetry, for which she won two awards. She was busy with modeling and creating light design for concerts in Auburn, Wash., for bands such as Led Zeppelin, Iron Maiden, Whitesnake, Judas Priest, Jethro Tull and Savoy Brown. Light design brought in good money, Roundtree indicates by rubbing her fingers together, signaling she made a lot of cash.

But now, it’s all about the art. Roundtree pulls out a photo album with some of the paintings she’s sold and shows off a Jackson Pollock-like work with splatters and strokes everywhere. She points to a mouse hidden within the blue and green paint on the canvas.

“This all transpired two years after the stroke,” Patrick said, motioning to the paintings that line the walls of their home.

He points to the piece hanging above the television in the living room of a sexy lady donning little clothing and an Army helmet in the middle of a green-and-brown camouflage background. Roundtree created it for him because he’s a big World World II buff.

On the wall behind the love seat is a nude study — a headless woman made up of colorful strokes breaking up each part of her body — instead of her mind.

Advertisement

eplace@sunmediagroup.net

Moore Park Art Show 2015

The annual Moore Park Art Show will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, July 26, at the park on the corner of Route 26 and Park Street in South Paris. The free, daylong event will showcase roughly 50 artists’ work, which will be available for purchase, along with a plethora of live entertainment and food.

Artists who entered the competition may receive one of the following awards: a $300 Best of Show Purchase Award, a $100 Judged Award or an Honorable Mention ribbon.

The live entertainment schedule is as follows:

9 a.m.: Mary Christine Ukelady
9:30 a.m.: Free Children’s Theater Workshop
10 a.m.: Brad Hooper
11 a.m.: Debi Irons & The Alberto Maranhao Theater Dance Co.
11:45 a.m.: Children’s Theater Workshop performance with Rijah Newell
12 p.m.: Just Us Two
1 p.m.: Neveah Dance Co.
2 p.m.: Terry Swett
3 p.m.: Paul Dube and Ellen Lindsey

For more information, visit www.mooreparkartshow.biz/home.html.

Comments are no longer available on this story

filed under: