Excerpt:
...It was as if Queen Victoria had entered the lobby
of the Chicago Cultural Center on the opening night
of Lee Godie's twenty-year retrospective exhibition.
No one knew for sure if the eighty-five-year-old artist,
who was in ill health and lived in a nursing home, would
even make it to the reception on that cold, rainy evening
in mid-November 1993. About an hour and a half after
the doors opened to the most extensive display of her
work ever assembled, Godie made her appearance, hobbling
slowly, one step at a time, on the arm of her daughter
Bonnie Blank. It was an extraordinary occasion, a proverbial
last hurrah, for in less than four months, Chicago's
venerable grand dame of outsider art would be dead.
A hush spread over the crowd of friends, fans, admirers,
and collectors who had gathered that evening. Several
photographers came forward, a little gingerly, to snap
pictures. They had heard stories of how the feisty old
lady used to attack photographers, clobbering them with
her heavy portfolio of art or chasing them for half
a block down the street. Times had changed. Godie was
older now and not fully aware of what was going on.
Some of this had to do with the encroachment of Alzheimer's-like
dementia, some with the medication she was on, and some
with the undiagnosed mental state she had harboured
all of her life - a condition responsible for both her
eccentric and quirky behavior as well as her unpredictable
mood swings.