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January 24, 2002
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STAFF
Q&A /By night, he cleans the halls of Leidy Labs. But let us tell you
about his day job.
Thats always been a dream of mine, to hang a portrait. BY SANDY SMITH
On the walls of the main staircase in Leidy Laboratories hang pictures of the turn-of-the-century scientists that made Penn a hotbed of research on the natural world. All but one of these pictures are old drawings or photographs of historical paintings. The exception is a color acrylic painting of Edward Drinker Cope, the famous 19th-century Penn paleobiologist. The painting, which replaces an engraved portrait of Cope that disappeared in March 2000, is the work of Biology Department Housekeeper Ron Washington. Washington, 57, has been painting for almost as long as he has worked at Penn30 years. Inspired by the works of art he came acrossmost notably Thomas Eakins The Agnew Clinicwhile cleaning campus buildings, Washington decided to take up the brush himself. The result, if the Cope portrait can serve as a guide, is impressive for a self-taught amateur artist. We spoke with Washington and his wife Arlene, who is at once his biggest booster and (in his words) my worst critic, about his passion for painting and how he came to do the Cope portrait. Q. What led you to take up painting? Q. Is this just a hobby for you? Q. How did you come to paint the Cope portrait? So one of the research specialists who hung all the pictures of the doctors in the stairwell, he and I were talking about this particular painting that was stolen off the wall, which was Edward Drinker Cope, and I told him I could reproduce [it], because I had seen a couple of printouts of the reproduction of it, and he said he would talk to the chairman and get the OK. And thats what happened, he OKd my painting. Q. Is there a particular style of painting that you prefer? Arlene: We took a trip to the Art Museum last Sunday, and I meansome of the artists in there werent Ron: Dont brag. Arlene: Im supposed to brag about it. Some of the pictures in there couldnt even compare to what he could do. In the Art Museum! Ron: Of course, everything there you may not think is great, but somebody felt that it would work, or it wouldnt be there. But I was very inspired looking at some of thewho was that? Monet? Claude Monet, some of his workI was really inspired by what hed done, some of his landscapes. As a matter of fact, they encouraged me to work bigger, because I used to work [on] these smaller canvases. Q. Ever had a dream that you might see your work hanging in a museum someday? Arlene: Theyre huge, and theyre beautiful too. Ron: But you know, thats always been a dream of mine, to hang a portrait. And that was a dream come true. A reward, first posted in 2000, is still available for information leading to the recovery of the original Cope portrait. Call the Biology Department, 215-898-7121, for more information.
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