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FRAMINGHAM’S
SPECIAL ARTIST:
“TEX” WALSER
Back during the Roarin’ Twenties, Prohibition,
the Great Depression and during World War
II, there was a very unusual artist who
resided in South Framingham. His name was
Floyd Walser. In his early life in Texas,
where he had been a cowboy, Floyd suffered
a devastating injury that paralyzed him
totally. That was back in 1909 when he was
21. As he bravely fought his paralysis,
slowly beginning to regain some use of his
right arm and hand, polio struck. He spent
the rest of his life after that with his
useless legs tucked under his torso as he
sat in his special chair. His left arm and
hand also remained paralyzed, although he
was able to physically move his left arm
around with his right hand. He could force
the fingers of his left hand to open or
to clamp down like a vise on objects he
might place there. His chair was “special”
since it was an old livingroom easy chair
that had four swiveling casters fastened
to its base in place of its original short
legs. He would be strapped into this chair,
and by thrusting his upper torso forcefully
toward the front, he could usually propel
himself around his small studio room. He
would also push with his wooden cane, and
sometimes grab a strategically placed “hand-hold”
with his strong right hand to further assist
his efforts to get himself around a bit.
Frequently, his able-bodied friends and
helpers would push him in the chair to where
he wanted to be.
He
came to live in Framingham in 1923 when
the very talented and internationally famous
musician, Madame Edith Noyes Greene and
her husband Roy, invited him to move from
Texas to live in their lakeside home as
their protégé. While still living in Texas,
Floyd had taken several correspondence courses
in art as a way of coping with his handicap.
He had gotten quite good at sketching people
and places and eventually came to the attention
of the Greenes.
Roy
Greene (who conducted the Framingham Civic
League Orchestra for many years) drove Floyd
into the famed art school at the Museum
of Fine Arts. Roy would drive him from his
Lake Avenue home, in his 1920 Ford Model
T roadster, once a week for what became
nine years of intense and very fruitful
study by the developing artist. Floyd learned
to work in every art medium from pencils,
pens and charcoal to watercolors, pastels,
oils and even etching. Difficult for anyone,
but seemingly impossible for a person with
his “limitations”. In addition to portraits,
he would capture many historic homes and
buildings in Framingham and nearby communities.
Usually these were pencil or charcoal sketches
and many became etchings. One of his favorite
motifs was the gristmill near the Wayside
Inn in Sudbury, where he worked in oils,
pastels and watercolors that he did from
life outdoors near the mill. He seemed especially
drawn to trees with twisted, gnarled limbs
whose deformed branches surely must have
had special meaning to him.
Floyd
Walser, or as he liked to be called, “Tex”,
gave art lessons to a great many Framingham
residents. In fact, when President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt introduced the WPA in the
‘30s, as part of his “New Deal” to stimulate
the economy after the Great Depression,
Floyd was employed as an art teacher. Although
he had previously given art lessons to many
of the town’s residents, this job increased
the number of pupils studying with “Mr.
Walser”. A great many of these aspiring
artists were very young children. Often
in the summers when the weather permitted,
he could be found outside his studio that
was attached to the Greene’s Lake Waushakum
home, with a large group of well-behaved,
and maybe even motivated, youngsters. This
location was adjacent to the Anna Murphy
Playground. He surely had to work to hold
his charges’ interest, considering the close
proximity of all that the playground had
to offer.
It
is estimated that Floyd taught somewhere
in the neighborhood of 1,000 students over
the years of 1933 through 1948. Even after
that time, he continued to teach selected
adults the fine points of etching, as well
as how best to mat and frame their artwork.
His
life story, including how as a young, able-bodied
man, he stole rides on freight trains, in
true hobo fashion, then overcame his life-altering
handicap, and went on to do so well as an
artist and friend to many, is told in the
book, A Creative Odyssey by
Richard L. Rotelli. This book also contains
much 20th century history, including background
material about the Greenes. In addition,
it recounts the marvelous liberating changes
in Floyd’s life when he moved in next door
with Richie Rotelli, his wife Angela and
their young son “Dickie”, the book’s author.
Richie’s inventive genius, included designing
and building a motorized chair for Floyd
in 1949, and shortly thereafter, a boat.
These and other innovations by Richie provided
the artist more independence to get around
on his own than he had experienced in 40
years.
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Click here
for a sampling of Floyd’s artwork as he
developed his talent over the years.
Also,
click here for
a few photographs, most are right from the
book.
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