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Excerpt:
Ronald and Jessie Cooper became artists by chance in
their mid-fifties. Prior to that, their lives had followed
a path common for their generation: early marriage,
leaving their home-town for better opportunities, raising
four children, working in a variety of jobs, financial
challenges, health problems, and so on. With no relevant
background, their journey into the world of art was
taken with no expectations.
The youngest of eleven children, Ronald Cooper was
born in 1931 in Plummers Mill, a tiny farming community
in north-east Kentucky. He grew up attending the local
Christian Holiness Church, and this religious grounding
was later to have a defining influence on his work as
an artist. In 1949 he married Jessie Dunaway, a local
girl, who was sixteen at the time.
After a number of years of working in grocery stores
and supermarkets in Kentucky and Ohio, the Coopers ran
a country store, but when this failed after eight years
Ronald took a job in quality control on the assembly
line at Frigidaire and Jessie found employment on the
production line at a ‘peanut factory’.
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While he was employed at Frigidaire, Ronald suffered
the first of two heart attacks. In 1984 he was seriously
injured in a motoring accident. His recovery was painful
and slow, and he suffered from clinical depression.
With Ronald unable to work, the Coopers moved into a
mobile home.
To occupy Ronald’s mind, their children bought him
some electric-powered woodworking tools, and he began
to make simple wooden toys cut out of flat pieces of
timber, which were then painted by Jessie and sold in
local craft shops. In 1987, Tom Sternal, an art professor
at Morehead State University, Kentucky came across their
work and encouraged them to try their hand at personal
expression.
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