
New Bedford artist paints Fenway-inspired murals
throughout New England
Hitting home: Artist M-C Lamarre paints monster works at
the homes of some very lucky Sox fans.
By Regina Cole
Boston Sunday Globe
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Owen, left, and
Jack Boucher got the surprise of their lives
when they came home to find the Green
Monster painted on a wall in their bedroom.
(Photograph by Hornick-Rivlin)
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Jack and Owen Boucher share a room, which might
ordinarily be a problem for 13- and 10-year-old
brothers. But not here: One long wall of their bedroom
is painted to look like the Green Monster, and for these
young athletes, it is pretty much the coolest thing -
ever. Twin beds sit at either end of the Fenway Park
scoreboard, on which Ortiz is up and the Yankees are
decisively losing to the home team 6-0.
"Our friends think we're kidding," says Owen, with a
grin.
"They don't believe it until they see it," adds older
brother Jack.
"Does it inspire you to play better?" asks their father,
John Boucher. He and his wife, Lisa, decided to surprise
the boys with a Fenway-themed room in 2007, a year after
the family moved into a condo in the Back Bay. After a
few Google searches, Lisa found the website of M-C
Lamarre, an artist in New Bedford who started painting
Fenway-inspired murals on request in 2004. She has since
completed about 25 such projects across New England.
"I'm one of 10 children, and with all my nieces and
nephews, I get lots of requests to decorate nurseries,"
Lamarre, 34, says. "After having decorated rooms for a
whole string of nieces, when one of my nephews moved
into a new house in 2003 I created a Fenway-inspired
mural for him, which is how this started."
Last fall, the parents of a baby boy in Saugus asked
Lamarre to paint a soft sepiatoned scene from a 1950s
Fenway Park on the walls of their son's nursery. Adult
fan Sean Stevenson wanted an entire wall in his Bedford,
New Hampshire, basement sports room transformed into the
Monster. "My wife calls it `Mantown,' " he says.
Although he and his friends already gathered in the
space to watch Red Sox games, he says it wasn't really
complete until Lamarre painted the mural. "It never
occurred to me that I could do this until I met her,"
Stevenson says. "The game she painted on my scoreboard
is the one in 2004 when the Sox became the team that
went on to win the World Series."
An avid Sox fan, Lamarre has always loved Fenway Park.
After witnessing Clay Buchholz's no-hitter in 2007, she
was inspired to paint the game's scoreboard on bar
stools, now kept in her studio. While she's working,
many clients will come in and tell her about the first
time they went to Fenway, or share an exuberant moment
experienced in the stands. "People really enjoy bringing
a piece of that into their homes with them," she says.
Lamarre recently spent five days painting the Green
Monster onto a 42-by-11-foot side of a Waterbury,
Connecticut, barn. She says the homeowner hoped that the
mural would cheer up his family after his mother-in-law
- a huge Sox fan - passed away. They call it the "Green
Barnster." Lamarre says that "people would come by and
see the progress, and I enjoyed the thumbs up I would
get from the postman."
Lamarre personalizes each project to her client's
preferences. In one young fan's room, the scoreboard
displays the date of his birthday. One Sox fan loves
McDonald's, so on his painting, Lamarre incorporated the
fast-food logo as well as the Citgo sign. A portable
scoreboard commissioned as a 30th anniversary gift has
the couple's wedding date on the back.
To identify the perfect Fenway-green paint, Lamarre took
swatches to the ballpark and tried to match them. But
she doesn't use only one color in her murals. It depends
on the amount of natural light in the room. If she's
painting a basement, she'll use a lighter green.
"This is different from the usual interior decorative
work," Lamarre says. She's used to working with women,
since they tend to make most design decisions. Now her
clients are often children and young men. Says Lamarre:
"It's a switch, and it's fun."
Regina Cole is a freelance writer living in Gloucester.
Send comments to
designing@globe.com.
Art by M-C Lamarre, 348 Acushnet Ave., New Bedford,
508-717-9178, mclamarre.com
June 29, 2008
Source URL:
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/magazine/articles/2008/06/29/hitting_home/
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