Excerpt:
...Driving the Woodville Highway, outside Tallahassee,
Florida, you'll pass the usual assortment of nondescript
fast food restaurants, the occasional massage parlor,
a handful of auto body shops. However, there is one
sight that will make you pull to the side of the road
and investigate. It's an environment - garage doors,
interior doors, seven-foot lengths of utility poles,
sculptures made of old bicycles, animals made of wire
in the trees and on the roofs of the small buildings
on the property. What you've stumbled across is the
home of visionary artist Mary Proctor, her workshop,
studio, and home gallery. She calls her environment
the American Folk Art Museum and Gallery, but the primary
exhibit is always Mary Proctor. From her signature works
- paintings rendered on large household panel doors
up to 84 inches long - to her welcoming and optimistic
personality, the gallery is the primary tool of Mary
Proctor and what she considers her ministry.
For years, Mary owned and operated Noah's Ark Flea Market;
the name and the animals around her museum and gallery
suggest her affinity for all of what she calls 'the
Lord's creations.' Before turning to painting, Mary
collected buttons, bottle caps, doll parts, costume
jewelry, watches, and thousands of other small objects,
filling her shop and her home with the small trinkets
without having a specific purpose in mind. Then, in
1995, she says, the purpose was given to her in a vision.