I will close this series of reviews with a couple of odds and ends after thoughts.
One, what did it mean to live for over a century between 1860 and 1961? She died on December 13, 1962. I was all of 319 DAYS old! What if I somehow lived to 2062? It's incomprehensible. All the things that she saw. Some of them are also captured in her paintings and I want to toss two of them in here.
Two, who were all those little people? Were they just "manikins" plopped into a moment in time like some child's diorama project for school? Or were they real people? It's easy to think of them as anonymous characters. By and large, Moses didn't give them detailed specific qualities--she was not a portraitist. But still, there are many that hold some aspect of gesture or placement or attire that make you want to ask--who was this? I'll share two examples.
Three and finally, I share a painting that just delighted the child in me so much. And then when I connected the dots, it was even more meaningful. "So Long Til Next Year" is one of her many Christmas themed paintings. It is based in part on the ubiquitous "T'was The Night Before Christmas" (originally titled "A Visit From St. Nicholas") by Clement-Clarke Moore (1779 - 1863). Moses painted this work in December of 1960. She missed the mark by 12 days. Yet, she clearly set her sights on another Christmas. How magical.
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