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"Boy with Doll" contemporary figurative painting. acrylic on canvas. 15 in x 30 in.
"Boy with Doll" contemporary figurative painting
One Saturday morning when I was about 12 or 13, I went outside and noticed that the people in the house between us and the
highway were having a yard sale. The outside of their house was lined with tin like chicken coops are made from, so I thought it was strange
that they would have a yard sale like people did in town. They had a ripped
up couch and an old washing machine on their porch and old cars in the weeds behind their
house. What could they possibly have to sell anyway? I couldn't imagine why they had all that doll stuff, and then I saw Billy sitting in a rusty metal chair. Billy was about my age, or at least as old as my sister, but he was retarded. He was holding one of the life-sized dolls and crying. His face was red and he looked like he was choking. Billy's daddy was sitting beside him in a ratty old recliner he had dragged outside. There was only one person there at the yard sale, a black lady in a big 70's Lincoln.
Billy's daddy was trying to convince her to make a decision about the dolls.
"Take it all if you want. You'll be doing us a favor." Billy started to moan, and his daddy told him to shut up.
"Shut up Billy," he said, and then he got up and snatched one of the
dollhouses off the ground. Then the door slammed behind me and Billy's momma came out screaming like she always
did. She was barefoot and wearing a home-made muumuu like she always wore because nothing
else would fit her. Her hair was thin and greasy and she was completely bald in the very back. Many of her teeth were missing, and she was screaming,
"You let that baby have his babies!"
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Website and images copyright 2004 Joe Moorman. Not to be reproduced without express permission. |