This memoir is a love letter to creativity and an exploration of what it means to redefine oneself in the wake of change. Framed by the legacy of Indiana watercolor artist Rob O’Dell, The Artist, Ladoga, Indiana invites readers to embrace their own extraordinary, ordinary lives, reminding us that art can be a bridge connecting hearts across time and space.
Inspired by her father’s creative impulse, imagination, and legacy, Kelly shares her story of facing her father’s loss—and finding herself.
Selected images described in the book can be viewed below.
6" x 9"
From the late '60s or early '70s
14 x 21”
10" x 14"
Scene just outside the picture window in Dad’s original studio, a repurposed
granary behind our house.
Indiana Bell “Artist of the Year,” 1980
11" x 14"
6" x 9"
Description: A lone barn, straight on, with a purple-and-orange sunset shining through the open hayloft door
29” x 22”
26” x 20”
14" x 22"
Junkyard filled with a jumble of boats, doors, and metal burn barrels in the “Lost and Found” style
Example of breakout technique
22" x 29"
21" x 29"
21" x 14"
13" x 9"
20" x 18"
30" x 40"
Small vignettes of different objects (a tree, a fence, a barn) with handwritten descriptions of the techniques used to paint them beside each one
14" x 10"
20" x 14"
24" x 20"
One of four scenes from the Prairie Heritage Print Collection offered in 1974 by Citizens National Bank in Decatur, Illinois
30" x 22"
Painted in 1976 to be reproduced as lithograph prints, it was named after my family’s farmstead in Ladoga.