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Artist Sarah Sutro, right, with Louison House director Kathy Keeser and staff member Moira Miller. Sutro donated three artworks for the Bracewell Youth Housing Project.
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An abstract work of light on the stairway.

Art Donation Brightens Bracewell Youth Project

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
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Above, a watercolor landscape on the second floor.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Residents entering transitional housing at 111 Bracewell Ave. can look to the left to see a light at the end of the tunnel. 
 
The dark painting with its pathway toward lighted element brought to mind the Hoosac Tunnel, said Kathy Keeser, executive director of Louison House, on Friday.
 
"Somebody who was going through something could think, well, this is a way out — or a way in," she said, of why she selected that piece.
 
Plus, she added, the colors really worked in the front hallway of the Bracewell Youth Housing Project
 
The work was one of three donated by artist Sarah Sutro, whose paintings also hang in the Flood House and in Terry's House in Adams. A regional and international artist who makes her home in North Adams, her artworks have been in collections and exhibitions in the United States and abroad, including at the State House
 
Sutro's recently been going through her works of acrylics, inks and watercolors she's created over her career.  
 
"I just have enjoyed giving some of my paintings that are in storage in my studio, not doing anything with them, and having them out in the community instead, and having other people enjoy them and relate to them," she said.
 
"In a way, paintings should go out and flow into spaces where they can have a life with people and not be just, you know, stashed."
 
On the stairway up to the second floor is a second painting — tall and luminous in pastels and giving a sense of upward drift — and a third on the landing, a small watercolor of a serene landscape.
 
"I was originally a figurative artist," Sutro Said. "I went through my own hard times and sort of struggled with what I was going to paint and how did I express it, and I gradually got more and more abstract, and then I did real abstraction. 
 
"That is fun, and then, but I was always doing watercolors. So there's a landscape up here that's always been like something I love to do outside. And so that's continued. Now I'm kind of doing combination of abstraction and realism."
 
Keeser said Sutro invited her to pick out which ones she liked. 
 
"I picked up three different ones, way different than the other two that we already have," she said. 
 
There's a palm one in the living room at Terry's House (the original Louison House) that's not really open to the public, and a large landscape and fan painting that's been the background for events at the Flood House.
 
Keeser said she selected the locations based on which painting seemed to fit best in the house, which is designed for young people seeking temporary shelter. One of the building's first tenants, Doug, was moving out that day into his own apartment.
 
"I thought of youth going through different phases, because this is a lot what we're at with youth here," Keeser said of the tunnel painting. "They're going through those phases in life that we're talking about for 111 and all of that we were talking about in the opening ceremony, to the positive direction. 
 
"We can't say that everybody's going out or in, or whatever direction to the positive angle. But that's what we'd hope."
 

Tags: artwork,   donations,   louison house,   

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SteepleCats Fall in Extra Innings

iBerkshires.com Sports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. -- The Ocean State Waves scored four runs in the top of the 11th and went on to a 9-6 win over the SteepleCats in the New England Collegiate Baseball League.
 
Jack LaRose went 3-for-5 with a double in the game-winning rally.
 
North Adams (1-9) had a golden opportunity to win the game in the bottom of the 10th.
 
With the game tied, 5-5, Nelphie Lopez started the inning with a sacrifice bunt to advance Bobby Stang, the "ghost runner," to third base. Ocean State (3-8) then intentionally walked the next two hitters to load the bases with one out.
 
Waves reliver Andrew Jacobs then got a 1-2-3 double play to end the inning.
 
Jacobs struck out a pair and allowed one unearned run in the bottom of the 11th in three innings of work to earn the win.
 
North Adams used five pitchers. Joe LaPrade struck out a pair and allowed no runs in two innings of work.
 
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