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Excerpt:
...William Thomas Thompson’s
career and identity as a visual artist would seem to
defy many of the current characterizations of outsider
art. He was a fundamentalist Christian since the age
of 13, a self-made millionaire who lost a fortune made
from imported silk flowers, semi-paralysed since 1980
by Guillain-Barré syndrome, and, most remarkably, since
1989, a painter and visual artist who accepts that this
occupation is a pre-ordained mission. In 1989 Thompson
had an extraordinary road-to-Damascus experience which
left him committed to painting.
Thompson is an articulate, engaging
man with great social grace. He remains driven by intense
though humble ambition for recognition as an artist.
Although he came from a rural family and is not university
educated, his drive was diverted to art rather than
to amassing great wealth.
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Over the past decade,
Thompson has executed around 600 paintings, and two
separate versions of the remarkable Revelation murals
(one 300 feet long and the other 175 feet in length).
He has developed an unmistakable style which owes much
to the lack of normal control of his arms and legs caused
by his illness. He mixes his acrylic paints right on
the canvases spread out on the floor, and paints very
quickly. The wavy, unsteady execution of the images
and the plentiful lettering around them is due to his
physical impairment and he accepts that otherwise they
would lack their dynamic excitement and childlike charm.
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