Buildings and bus stops: Rebecca Tombaugh paints KC — sometimes with a stick

July 6, 2018  |  Tommy Felts and Bobby Burch

Rebecca Tombaugh

A lack of clear direction felt liberating as Rebecca Tombaugh unrolled a 12-foot piece of heavy paper in her backyard and got to work, she said.

Rebecca Tombaugh

Rebecca Tombaugh

The 59-year-old artist had been tasked with painting a mural of sorts for the Nonprofit Village, a coworking spot that soon would open at 31 W. 31st Street. It’s co-founder, Mehgan Flynn, saw Tombaugh’s pieces at the Buttonwood Art Space in Midtown and thought a few original works would brighten the new space.

Flynn told the painter to tap into her own creative inspirations for the project, Tombaugh recalled.

“I said, ‘OK, well then I’m going to do whatever I want,’” she added, laughing.

The result was a panoramic cityscape of Kansas City, splashed with color — now hanging prominently in the Nonprofit Village’s conference room.

“I really love Kansas City’s buildings — the Uptown, Liberty Memorial and other iconic structures,” Tombaugh said. “When I think of Kansas City, I picture all these beautiful buildings in different parts of the city and I just kind of mushed them all together in one big piece.”

The Nonprofit Village is planning an artists reception for Tombaugh 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. July 26, in hopes of showcasing the unique vision of her native Kansas City, Flynn said.

Keep reading after the video.

Sticking with a lifelong, but renewed talent

Tombaugh still seems tickled that art lovers are willing to pay for her work.

“There are a couple of people who even collect my stuff now,” she said, giggling in her South Kansas City home.

That sense of disbelief could stem from her previous reluctance to step out onto the Kansas City arts scene, she said. It wasn’t until her adult children started attending First Fridays and encouraged her to take her stacks of paintings to the Crossroads that she agreed to make the leap.

“I Googled ‘art galleries’ and it was just a foreign world to me,” she said.

Tombaugh humbly debuted her work in about 2010 — in the bar area at the Ramada Inn, she said.

“The bartender was fine with it,” Tombaugh added. “We were like, ‘Yeah, we’ll have an art show right here.’”

As her confidence developed, she pushed her paintings out further — to coffee shops, boardrooms and eventually even galleries, which had at one time seemed so intimidating, she said.

“I’ve always felt like I wasn’t a real artist because I didn’t have a degree,” Tombaugh admitted.

But it wasn’t until she discovered plein air events — typically outdoor landscape painting competitions — that she truly tapped her passion, she said.

“They’re for nobody’s like me — I don’t have a name or reputation; I just love to paint outdoors,” Tombaugh said. “You compete for two hours and there’s a judging at the end. It’s a very friendly environment. I’ve won one, so anybody can win.”

At a recent event, she forgot her brushes and pens, so Tombaugh painted with a stick she pulled off a tree, she said.

“It was great!” Tombaugh said. “I thought, ‘I might just paint with a stick from now on.’”

Transformative creativity in KC

A former Kansas Press Association journalist of the year honoree — “I got fired from a lot of the best newspapers in Kansas City,” Tombaugh joked — the artist lived all across the metro for her work as a reporter at The Kansas City Star, The Kansan, Independence Examiner, Blue Springs Examiner, and Hiawatha World, she said.

It afforded her plenty of opportunities to examine the greater city from all sides, Tombaugh said, noting the experience began as a child.

“I remember my grandfather taking me down The Paseo, Gillham and to City Market. There’s a sense of old Kansas City, with a rusty red color and balconies,” she said. “In my 20s, 30s and 40s, I became more interested in the skyhooks, the shuttlecocks, the Nelson.”

“I really like the mix of old and new downtown,” Tombaugh added. “The streetcar provides a real contrast, and I love seeing the old buildings that are being restored instead of just torn down.”

She loves the transformation of the local arts scene during the past few decades — now a more welcoming place, she said.

“Kansas City has always been wonderful, but I think it’s really turned into such an art town, a creative town,” Tombaugh said. “There’s such support for creative people of all kinds — not just painters or artists like me. Everywhere you go, there’s creative stuff happening in coffee shops.”

An artist’s eye

Inspiration comes from all walks of life, Tombaugh said, noting the opportunities for an artist that lie in simply observing the world around them.

“I couldn’t hire a model, but I really needed to practice figures,” she said. “I noticed the people at bus stops — they’re completely unposed because they’re just there waiting. So I would sneak a picture of them. Driving down Main, they have the best bus stops. ‘Click! Click! Click!’ I’ve gotten really good at it.”

Much of Tombaugh’s style developed organically — and sometimes by accident, she said. For example, she once had a dream that she painted with a calligraphy pen, so she woke up and tried it, Tombaugh said.

“I hid in the bedroom, just in case this was nuts,” she said. “I got some ink and started going. I was like ‘This is it!’ A few years later, I was working on one and I spilled some water on it. And I liked how it looked. Now I do it all the time. The accidents work.”

Admittedly, that doesn’t mean her completed pieces are universally understood, she said.

“When I paint, I’m trying to paint the feeling of what I’m seeing, rather than paint what it looks like. I try not to overthink it,” Tombaugh said. “My mom had a hard time looking at my art. She’d say, ‘I just don’t know what it is. Can you give me a little hint?’”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Emoji My City Single Wing Creative

        Emoji My City launches its hometown emoji keyboard with winks to iconic Kansas City

        By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2019

        Kansas City scenes from the Kauffman Center to 18th and Vine. Winks to local trends and celebrities. A playful push puts whimsical KC in the mobile devices of hometown fans and visitors alike. And it comes courtesy of the team that helped rebrand Kansas City’s now-iconic logo in 2013. In the age of digital marketing,…

        Reese Davis as Ant-Man with "Ant-Man" star and Overland Park native Paul Rudd

        Walkin and Rollin, KC maker community treat kids with limited mobility to custom Halloween costumes

        By Tommy Felts | October 25, 2019

        The children in Reese Davis’ preschool class were often standoffish around him.  “He was the only kid they knew in a wheelchair,” recalled his father, Lon Davis, founder of Walkin and Rollin Costumes — a Kansas City-based non-profit that builds costumes for kids in walkers and wheelchairs, free of charge.   “They didn’t really know how…

        Digital Sandbox KC cohort; Mario Pabaroue, Len Frye and Brandon Dunlap, FilmDove Inc.; A.J. Mellott, Ronawk LLC; and Sunti Wathanacharoen, Pulmonaer Analytics LLC

        Digital Sandbox KC selects diverse health, AI and filmmaking startups for latest funding

        By Tommy Felts | October 24, 2019

        The latest trio of Digital Sandbox KC companies pushes the proof-of-concept program deeper into Johnson County with a new Overland Park partnership. “This group showcases the wide spectrum of businesses assisted by the Sandbox, from a data platform for creative filmmakers and studios, to improved patient care in asthma, to biologics in regenerative medicine,” said…

        Lyndsey Gruber, PEPPR

        Woman-led PEPPR sets table for simplified event planning with platform cooked in KC kitchens

        By Tommy Felts | October 23, 2019

        A veteran of the restaurant industry thanks to her family’s long-simmering connections to Kansas City kitchens, Lyndsey Gruber stood as a woman on her own Wednesday at 1 Million Cups. “It’s just me,” Gruber, CEO and founder of PEPPR, told Startland News before the event, which served as a mid-point of Women’s Empowerment Week and…