My thesis exhibition “The Quick and The Dead” collects painted and drawn portraits of characters I know or have known, some dead now, some still living. It also touches on the myth of the rapture, that supposed day when the “last trump” will sound, calling “the quick and the dead” saved in Christ, to arise and be transported. Although I have been a confirmed agnostic for sixty years, the myth as presented to me as a child at The City-Wide Gospel Tabernacle remains palpable. Examples of “The Dead” include a deceased squirrel looking skyward, for all the world as if it were awaiting the second coming, a portrait of my cousin, Shirley who revealed when I was fifty-three that I was adopted, and a series memorializing, the late David Richmond, p...