Marketplace    Homes    Jobs    Classifieds    Coupons
[SeMissourian.com] Partly Cloudy ~ 55°F  
River stage: 34.01 Rising
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Print Email link Respond to editor Read comments (3) Share link

Craig Thomas showcases Jackson ife in junior high mural

Thursday, January 8, 2009

(Photo)
KIT DOYLE ~ kdoyle@semissourian.com
Artist Craig Thomas stands in front of his new mural in the Jackson Junior High cafeteria. The 12-panel mural uses bright colors and took Thomas several months to complete. It was unveiled to students Monday.

[Click to enlarge]
The students at Jackson Junior High hang their art in the cafeteria to add a little color to the harsh, white cinderblock walls. The large, bland room received a permanent piece of color and social commentary with the unveiling of a 36-foot mural by local artist Craig Thomas.

The mural, entitled "The Life and Times of Jackson, Missouri," took Thomas a total six weeks at 40 hours a week, though the time was spread out over about six months. He said it was the most technically challenging piece and by far the most colorful he's ever done.

The images in the mural flow from one panel to the next with baseball, the Bollinger Mill, the marching band, students studying, Hubble Creek, football, volleyball and other scenes that Thomas and the students he consulted thought represented Jackson. There's even a tractor plowing a field at sunset.

"When I moved here Jackson was very much an ag town," Thomas said. "It still is."

Getting the 12 panels to match up was tough, he said. The mural in its entirety wouldn't fit in his studio, so Thomas had to periodically lay the panels out in his driveway to make sure the scenes matched.

It was hard "letting everything flow together," he said. Though Thomas often uses bright colors in his work, he said it was challenging trying to manage the bright hues and find a balance between abstract and realism.

The school's principal, Cory Crosnoe, had worked with Thomas for the tiger mural at Cape Girardeau Central High School. When he looked at the walls of the junior high, he knew they needed something.

"There hasn't been a lot of chance to get a lot of color in," Crosnoe said. The mural was a way to liven up the place.

The student council spent around a year raising money with raffles, back-to-school T-shirts and two dances. They also sent letters to area businesses soliciting donations.

Student council president Dru Haertling, 14, and vice president Kelsey McDowell, 15, were giddy after students tore down the alternating red and black strips of paper hiding each panel.

"It looks really cool," Haertling said.


Comments
Note: The nature of the Internet makes it impractical for our staff to review every comment. If you feel that a comment is offensive, please Login or Create an account first, and then you will be able to flag a comment as objectionable. Please also note that those who post comments on semissourian.com may do so using a screen name, which may or may not reflect a website user's actual name. Readers should be careful not to assign comments to real people who may have names similar to screen names. Refrain from obscenity in your comments, and to keep discussions civil, don't say anything in a way your grandmother would be ashamed to read.

wonderful job!! He does such super work. It is a good Idea. My children went to school there and I remember that wall being pretty bland. A little stimulation never hurt anyone...

-- Posted by Patti Caid on Thu, Jan 8, 2009, at 11:01 AM

wonderful job!! He does such super work. It is a good Idea. My children went to school there and I remember that wall being pretty bland. A little stimulation never hurt anyone...

-- Posted by Patti Caid on Thu, Jan 8, 2009, at 11:01 AM

I love the mural. The photograph is awesome I am hoping it is going into the contest of framed pictures I am glad to see him doing what he does best.

-- Posted by wanderingcharmer on Tue, Jan 13, 2009, at 8:43 PM


Respond to this story

Posting a comment requires free registration. If you already have an account on seMissourian.com, semoball.com, or shethemagazine.com, enter your username and password below. Otherwise, click here to register.

Username:

Password:  (Forgot your password?)

Your comments:
Please be respectful of others and try to stay on topic.

Enter your email address to subscribe to our mailing lists: