By WENDY STIVER — wstiver@lockhaven.com POSTED: March 1, 2008
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Ave Hurley, a Mansfield artist, painted this Scriptural mural
freehand in the sanctuary of the renovated Charlton Historic
Chapel.
WENDY STIVER/THE EXPRESS
CHARLTON — Ave Hurley was busy pursuing her artistic career
in New York City, when she suddenly became disabled.
“My right hand went through a window, severing my wrist,” she
stated, “After three microsurgeries, the doctors said I had
85-percent permanent damage and that the nerves would not
regenerate.”
That was in 1984.
This year, she climbed up and down a ladder and scaffolding inside
Charlton Historic Chapel with little trouble as she painted a mural
of Christ sorrowing over Jerusalem.
Hurley knows something about sorrow, considering her bleak
diagnosis 24 years ago.
She moved out of the city and later “over the border” from New York
State to Mansfield, Pa., to raise her five children, yet never
forgot about her artistic talent.
Her forearm muscles were re-attached incorrectly, she reported,
requiring her to discover a new way to handle a brush, however
awkward it was.
Taking her inspiration from Joni Erickson Tada, bestselling author
and quadriplegic who paints with a brush held in her mouth, Hurley
gave it a try.
“I began taping brushes to my hand,” she stated. “My work took much
longer and was not as precise, so I only painted for family and
friends.”
Later, as she got used to her method, she volunteered to paint
sponsor signs for Mansfield’s Little League and a few stores.
A couple of years ago, on a visit to Victory Highway Chapel in
Painted Post, N.Y., she heard the church ask for volunteers to
paint scenery for “Two From Galilee,” a large Christmas production
to benefit a food pantry.
You can guess what she did.
“I worked five weeks on their project, becoming their lead artist,”
Hurley recalled. “It was stretching my abilities but through the
grace of God, I was able to do it and the play was a huge success.
The scenery came out so well they left the set up for over a month
after the play.”
A few months later she created portable scenery for a dinner
production, a mission project of the same church.
“Around that time, my withered hand started to hurt,” Hurley
recalled. “I went to a specialist in Sayre to find out that after
20 years, my hand was suddenly regenerating nerves and becoming
more useful. Although it hurts all the time, it now has feeling and
I can paint again with little difficulty.”
She now displays her artwork online and sells prints on eBay and
etsy.com. She has hope that she will be able to establish an art
business again.
“I am still disabled with lupus and sarcoidosis and degenerative
disc disease, have had gangrene three times in my legs, am prone to
cellulitis and have had a few heart attacks,” she added, almost as
a side note. “But I am determined to paint anywhere, anytime, since
God has given me back the use of my hands.”
The local mural project was “both an honor and a privilege,” she
stated. “I feel really blessed to be a small part of the
restoration project going on at Charlton Chapel and wish all God’s
blessings to be upon their congregation.”
Welcome to Ave Hurley Illustrations ~ Featured Artists Network