[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 24 (Monday, February 10, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H1700-H1701]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN CELEBRATION OF THE LIFE OF PATRICIA McNAMARA BEAZLEY
(Ms. KAPTUR asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, I rise to pay tribute to the life of a great
American, Patricia McNamara Beazley, a magnificent woman and citizen
whom we laid to rest today in Toledo, Ohio, after a mass at Gesu
Church, a place that she called home.
Pat Beazley was an extraordinary human being. The minute you met her
you felt like a member of her family. She was an artist of family, a
dedicated wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, and an artist
in her own right. Her paintings abound not just in her home but
throughout our country and, certainly, in her home community.
Her son, Michael--a personal friend--her daughters, her
grandchildren, her great-grandchildren, and her wonderful husband, Ben,
just know that our entire community stands with you. We know what a
builder of family and community Pat was. We celebrate her life--her
life of love, her life of contributions to others, her very quiet way
of building friendships and, in so doing, building a community that was
strong--her church family, her community of artists and, obviously, her
own family.
We say ``thank you'' to the Beazley Family for sharing Pat with us
these many, many decades. We have been so blessed by her presence, and
the beauty of her life and the beauty of her works will remain with us
always. May she rest in peace, and may God give comfort to those who
remain behind to carry forward her legacy.
[From: Toledo Blade]
Patricia Beazley, 83, an award-winning artist known for her
skill in portraiture and in depicting family scenes and
children, died Wednesday in her Sylvania Township home.
Mrs. Beazley developed complications after a series of
strokes the last few years, her son, Michael, said. Mrs.
Beazley and her loving, surviving husband, Ben, raised three
[[Page H1701]]
gifted children--Michael, Mary Beth and Trish. Their
grandchildren & great grandchildren pay tribute to their
lifetime of love and devotion.
Pat was an artist in every sense of the word. She accepted
commissions and she created formal portraits, such as of
professors and administrators at the University of Toledo and
Ohio State University. Families commissioned her to depict a
mother with a baby or a montage of family scenes. On
occasion, she was asked on short notice to do a portrait that
could be displayed at a wake or funeral service. She created
the familiar picture, ''Daughter Too,'' of the pig-tailed
girl eating an apple on the side of Al Peake & Sons &
Daughter Too produce trucks.
``Her biggest strength as an artist was she really captured
the likeness,'' her daughter Mary Beth said. ``A friend of
hers stopped by and said, `She captured the spirit.' ''
Mrs. Beazley worked primarily in pastel, though she was
versed in other media.
``She enjoyed anything from the still lifes to the
flowers,'' her son said. ``Her line of pencil drawings she
used to call `captured moments.' She always took joy in the
craft and a special pride in the reactions of the families
she did work for.''
Her work has been selected for the annual Toledo Area
Artists Exhibition at the Toledo Museum of Art and for a
Pastel Society of America exhibition and has been included in
other shows at the museum and through the Athena Art Society
and other groups. She received a Grumbacher Bronze Medallion,
and at several exhibitions, her works were deemed best-of-
show.
Her mother was an amateur artist, but Mrs. Beazley did not
take an art class until she was 39. She actively resisted
training as a child, she told The Blade in 1981, because ``I
just knew I wasn't good enough.''
She also was active at Gesu Church and volunteered for the
League of Women's Voters--she produced a public television
program featuring debates among local candidates--and on
behalf of civil rights.
She'd painted a mural on the kitchen wall when the family
lived in Chicago. She began sketching.--See more at: http://
www.leg acy.com/obituaries/toledoblade/obituary.aspx
?n=patriciabeazley&pid=169562150#sthash.VE uVwBOk.dpuf
____________________