A vision of wind-filled sails on the open sea will entice visitors up the main stairway at Minneapolis Central Library next week, when a new gift to the library goes public.
The ship is the centerpiece of a three-part, 11-foot-wide painting that's a $40,000 gift to the library from a Minneapolis man who fell in love with reading as a kid.
When the man, Eric Fermstad, died of cancer two years ago, his family and friends were surprised — and delighted — by the generosity of his unknown plans.
"The fact he gave this money to the library for art was incredible," said his brother, Thom Fermstad of Seattle, who coordinated the gift.
Recalling how their parents were always reading to the five Fermstad boys while they were growing up in Robbinsdale, Thom noted that his brother often hopped the bus to various branch libraries "just to check out books."
"That wasn't really cool at that time, but he was kind of a rebel and didn't care what people thought," Thom said in a phone interview. "He was a jack-of-all-trades kind of guy who used the library throughout his life for research on different projects."
A computer consultant and tinkerer, Fermstad invested in the stock market and in houses and apartments around Minneapolis. He kept an old houseboat on the Minnesota River and fell in love with an elementary schoolteacher, Lynn Townsend, with whom he shared a home for 27 years.
"On my first date with him I told him I was married once, to an artist, Jerry Ott," Townsend recalled recently over lunch with her former husband. "He said, 'Omigod! I love his work.' I think that's why he gave money to the library for art."