At the heart of the art
SHE IS
Passionate about art and people, a source of knowledge for the
seekers.
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE GLASS
Looking through her half moon-shaped window in the Laguna Art
Museum bookstore where she works, Eloise Woolcott praises the ocean
and palm trees just on the other side of the glass.
Outside lies Laguna Beach, where Woolcott has lived for the past
eight years. On the inside, the walls are lined with precious
souvenirs and filled with books featuring the most recent museum
exhibits, handmade pendulum clocks and artistic journals.
Woolcott waits behind the counter, ready to share the knowledge
that she has gained from the past two years of working in the store
and the previous three years of volunteering in the museum. When
anyone approaches the counter to make a purchase, she bubbles with
enthusiasm, passionate about the item as though she were buying it
herself.
AN INTERNATIONAL MEETING PLACE
Small in size, the Laguna Art Museum bookstore attracts as many as
1,500 visitors per day from as far away as Saudi Arabia and
Australia. Woolcott thrives in this international melting pot and
uncovers commonalities with all visitors through simple conversation.
“I receive so much emotionally, psychologically, intellectually,
spiritually from everyone that comes in here,” she said.
Although her job requires her to unpack and rearrange inventory,
most important to Woolcott is that when the visitors leave the
museum, “they feel better for being here and their day takes on a
lighter cast, a happier cast.”
A WORK IN PROGRESS
Woolcott regards her work and personal life as a road with
detours, but with a definite destination. Dedicating her life to her
four children and her mother, she has had little time for herself.
Now that her children are grown up and her mother has passed away,
Woolcott is beginning to nurture and care for herself.
Surrounded by art, she is allowing her artistic side to come out
for the very first time. Describing herself as a frustrated artist,
she used to cry to her mother that she couldn’t paint or draw,
“I see it, I feel it and I smell the paint, I smell all the
flowers, but I can’t put it on canvas.”
Her mother would console her, “You grow them, and I’ll paint
them.”
Until she is able to paint flowers herself, she is enjoying her
work with the people who have become like a family. And, in a lot of
ways, as she is looking out of her window, she doesn’t even feel like
she is at work.
“I treasure this experience,” she said. “I wake up and say, ‘Thank
you God for the privilege of working in Laguna Beach, the warmth, the
caring of the entire community, and, on top of it all, being able to
represent the museum, this atmosphere.’”
-- Story by Sara Wilson,
photo by Don Leach
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