Linda Doebbert's soft paintings of cabins hang in many Detroit Lakes homes. Those commissions might have constituted her career. But Doebbert loved experimenting, pushing her art from the realistic into the surreal.
In addition to watercolor and pastel painting, she did ink drawing, printmaking, photomontage, collage work and calligraphy. She made books and paper dolls.
"I think she tried and taught just about every phase of art that you could imagine," said Joann Knapp, a friend and fellow artist.
When asked in 2009 what she enjoyed most, Doebbert said, "I go through cycles, phases. Right now it's haiku."
Doebbert died April 9 at a Detroit Lakes hospital of a heart attack, after a long illness that left her bedridden. She was 74.
As a child growing up in Detroit Lakes, Doebbert would await trips from her aunts, who worked in advertising in the Twin Cities and would bring her end cuts of paper.
"I have been working with paper all of my life," Doebbert told the Detroit Lakes Tribune in 2009. "I'm incredibly in love with paper."
She studied music education and studio arts at St. Cloud State University, where she met Jerry Doebbert. He first spotted her one summer as she was walking down the street, he said last week.