Sometime after the turn of the last century, Grand Marais artist and art lover Anna C. Johnson painted a charming portrait of an elderly woman in a jaunty red cap, balancing a bundle of sticks on her back.
Sometime after the turn of this century, someone stole that painting from the gallery that bears her family name and replaced it with a duplicate.
We need to get that painting back, Minnesota.
Johnson painted what she knew. The soaring trees of the North Woods. The winding paths of the Gunflint Wagon Road.
She made art and she taught art. She had a pet moose she liked to walk around town. Visitors to the Johnson family's log-hewn trading post could browse a gift shop stocked with her work — paintings, pen-and-ink sketches, stained glass, ceramics fired at her home kiln.
You can still find her work on display around the North Shore, eight decades after her death. Nowhere more than the gallery dedicated to her memory, on the spot where the Johnson trading post once stood.
"Woman Hauling Sticks" was a crowd pleaser at the Johnson Heritage Post Art Gallery.
It was so popular that the Cook County Historical Society decided to have the painting scanned and reproduced so visitors to their gift shop could bring home their own smiling lady and her bundle of sticks.