© 2024 All Rights reserved WUSF
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Tour Brings Mouth-Painting Artist To Florida

In 1996, at just 20-years-old, artist Mariam Paré was shot while driving a friend’s car in Chicago.

A bullet passed through the door of the car and struckParé in the neck, paralyzing her instantly. She remembers watching as her own hands dropped lifelessly from the steering wheel onto her lap, still conscious, but unable to move.

The gunshot wound resulted in a spinal cord injury, leaving her a quadriplegic - unable to walk and with limited upper body and hand movement.

Her art was temporarily abandoned as she learned how to navigate the world with a disability.

Then a therapy session changed everything.

Artist Miriam Paré presents actor Pierce Brosnan with a portrait she painted with her mouth of him as Agent 007.
Credit Courtesy of Miriam Paré
Artist Miriam Paré presents actor Pierce Brosnan with a portrait she painted with her mouth of him as Agent 007.

“I had learned from a therapist how to write my name with a pen in my mouth and I took that idea and said, ‘well, I love painting so much and I want to still have painting in my life. I should try painting this way,’”Paré said.

 “I found that I could do it and kept doing it and ever since then I’ve been developing myself as an artist but as a mouth-painting artist.”

She began with stick figures, and worked her way up to complex portraits and landscapes.

“It is like starting over again,”Paré said. “It wasn’t like it was automatically as good as I had been with my hands.

“I had to learn what my neck could do and what motions would mimic a flick of the wrist or a light shading touch with the hand. I experimented a lot to find the brushstrokes I had before.”

Now,Paré serves as an ambassador for , a group of working artists with disabilities.

She recently wrapped up a North American tour at a stop at the St. Petersburg Museum of Fine Arts. 

Part of Miriam Paré's "Heavy Series" to depict to able-bodied people how it feels to be paralyzed.
Credit Courtesy of Miriam Paré
Part of Miriam Paré's "Heavy Series" to depict to able-bodied people how it feels to be paralyzed.

With her easel set up, a palette of acrylic paints nearby and a paintbrush gripped tightly between her teeth and lips, Pare painted while onlookers watched.

Most ofParé’s paintings are brightly colored depictions of people, sometimes imagined, sometimes celebrities like PierceBrosnanas Agent 007 or fellow painterFridaKahlo.

Part of Miriam Paré's "Heavy Series" to depict to able-bodied people how it feels to be paralyzed.
Credit Courtesy of Miriam Paré
Part of Miriam Paré's "Heavy Series" to depict to able-bodied people how it feels to be paralyzed.

It She said it took years for her to base art on her experience as a gunshot victim and disabled person, but the “Heavy Series” changed that. The paintings, mostly devoid of color, depicted images like clouds hanging by ropes or birds tied to boulders.

“It was my attempt at creating images that if an able-bodied person were to look at them, might visually give them an idea of what the heaviness of paralysis might be like, the heaviness of the body and spirit, something that would give them a tactile experience of it,”Paré said.

Through her art and mouth-painting demonstrations,Paré hopes to inspire people - those with disabilities and those without – to continue their passions no matter what obstacles they encounter.

See more of Mariam Paré's.

Daylina Miller is a reporter with in Tampa. receives support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Daylina Miller/Health News Florida /

Daylina Miller/Health News Florida /

Daylina Miller/Health News Florida /

Daylina Miller/Health News Florida /

Daylina Miller/Health News Florida /

Copyright 2015 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7

As WUSF’s multimedia reporter, I produce photos, videos, audiograms, social media content and more to complement our on-air and digital news coverage. It's more important than ever to meet people where they're at.
You Count on Us, We Count on You: Donate to WUSF to support free, accessible journalism for yourself and the community.