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The River View February 2026

Page 1

FEBRUARY 2026

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Proudly Local, Proudly Canadian

OUR PEOPLE, OUR COMMUNITIES, OUR STORIES

VOLUME 3, ISSUE 2

Book Views

Interactive yoga

6

Winter Carnivals

8

12

Finding Comfort and Community Through Art Q&A with

LISA BUTLER BY KRISTEN LAWSON

L

isa Butler loved poetry and art growing up in Newfoundland. She continued writing poetry throughout her life, but only took up painting and drawing again in the last ten years. She began to pursue art full-time in 2021, then moved to New Brunswick in 2023. Since arriving, the self-taught artist has had her work in the Bright & Brine Art Gallery and Maritime Crafts & More craft store. She was the Arts Council’s featured artist in September, then had her piece Hope displayed at the library in December.

Q: How did you get back into painting? In 2016 my brother was diagnosed with brain cancer. He had a rock painting business, and

was doing pretty well with it at the local markets. He passed away two months after being diagnosed. Instead of throwing away his paint I took it

home. I started painting my grief. There was no rhyme or reason, I was just using the paint. It made me feel better. I had another death in the family and it continued to be a way to cope. I stumbled upon my style while extracting negative emotions from myself. I used a lot of vibrant colors, a lot of motion and excitement, but still an element of darkness. I became known for my semi-abstract daisy paintings. The background was my whirlwind of emotions, but at the end there was the light, and finding a way to love life despite the loss. When my former husband was in the hospital I took all my

aggression out on a piece of driftwood. When it was done, I thought it was beautiful because it represented what life is; it's ups and downs. It's good and bad. I find much comfort in painting. It's a piece of myself that I'm putting on the canvas. If I never lost my brother, I don't know if I would've gotten back into art. I think he would be happy for me.

Q: Why did you decide to pursue art full-time? In 2020-21, I was going through such emotional torture about whether or not to resign from my job, so I shared a bunch of my poems on a poetry site. The feedback was very encouraging.

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