Some people like to color outside the lines, but Leslie “Wren” Vandever has always preferred to create her own lines for her whimsical drawings and paintings.
“I started my first artwork when I was about two years old, and I was given crayons and paper,” Wren says. “My parents saw immediately that I could do things with crayons and paper that they just weren’t expecting. I would open up the back of the coloring book to the white card cover and start drawing my own things there.”
Her creative approach continued throughout her youth.
“I would copy cartoons out of the comics on Sundays and start learning how to make the different characters myself,” she says. “In elementary school and in junior high, I really liked doing art more than I did anything in school. I didn’t really have any formal training until I got into high school, and then I started taking art classes every year. When I went to college, I went in with art as my major.”
“Her grandpa used to stop by every day after work, and he would put a pencil in her hand,” recalls her mother, Doris Shirley. “He started her out drawing pigs. And she was very good at drawing pigs when she was about two, two-and-a-half. And she just kept on drawing. She was just happy as she could be just drawing and reading.”
Wren’s favorite media now are watercolor, pen and ink, pencil, colored pencils and a digital stylus. “I like the way watercolor paint is transparent and sinks into hot press paper, and I like using ink with it,” the Sacramento, California, resident says. “I also like it because it’s so fast, and once it’s done, it’s done. But, if you’ve done it wrong, you’re going to have to do it all over again.”
And she still loves to feature animals in her art. “I like to make people smile when they look at my artwork, so I do animals mostly,” she says. “I can do dragons, or horses, but all of them are kind of goofy-looking. Even when I’ve tried to do really serious art, it ends up being cute. I can’t seem to help that.”
Her Whooping Crane recently joined the Janssen library of licensed artwork created by people affected by the diseases we work to treat and prevent.
“My whooping crane came about originally because of a Twitter challenge where the letter W (for whooping crane) was the subject,” Wren says. “I went ahead, and I did that. But, I also have always loved those birds. It gave me some real inspiration to do that particular piece of work.”
Wren has struggled with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) for more than 30 years, which often makes pursuing her passion a painful experience.
RA doesn’t have to stop you from doing the things that you love the most.”
“I was in the Air Force in the early 1980s,” Wren says. “After I got out, my husband, who was also in the Air Force, and I were assigned to Germany. And that is where I was first diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis.”
“I was just 31 years old when I was diagnosed with RA,” Wren says. “I was really surprised because I thought that was something just old people got.”
Just as she had with her coloring books years ago, Wren refused to be limited by arbitrary restrictions, and certainly not RA. She kept working, and she kept drawing and painting, and she eventually became an activist for those living with RA.
“My activism for rheumatoid arthritis began when I decided that I was tired of not knowing anybody else who had this disease,” Wren says. “Blogs were becoming a big deal, and so I decided to start one and just see what happened.”
Her blog, called RheumaBlog*, soon attracted quite a following. “My nickname, Wren, came about when I started blogging about my RA, and I didn’t feel comfortable using my own name,” she says. “I liked ‘Wren’ because I’ve always loved that little bird a little brown bird that’s really quick and has a pretty song.”
Wren enjoyed making online friends via her blog but she also really enjoys Twitter. “The social media that I use the most is Twitter because it’s so fast, it’s so immediate. And it doesn’t require me to write a whole lot, just enough to put out a few words of encouragement to people, or just to say how I’m feeling today. It’s nice for other people who have this disease to know that they’re not alone when they get up in the morning and it hurts.”
Wren’s active social media presence led to an invitation to attend Janssen’s first Joint Decisions conference. She now attends three to four RA conferences each year.
“I was just delighted [to attend Joint Decisions],” she says. “It gave me an opportunity to talk about my rheumatoid arthritis and to perhaps motivate other people to live their lives as well as they possibly could with it. Plus, I had an opportunity to meet people who had it, and compare notes, and make some new friends.”
“I want to give others with RA hope and energy and confidence.”
Through it all, art has remained Wren’s favorite activity, and she continues to draw every single day. “My RA influences my art in that I use it to distract myself from the pain that the RA causes,” Wren says. “While I’m doing the art, I’m not focusing on the pain. When it’s hard for me to hold a pen or a stylus, it gives me motivation to keep trying.”
Digital art has opened a whole new world for Wren. “I started doing digital art because it is often difficult for me to hold a pen or a pencil or paintbrushes for very long,” she says. “I’m able to hold a stylus pen in my hand that I can adjust the pressure on. It takes very, very little pressure on the tablet in order for me to do the artwork.”
Being her mom Doris’ primary caregiver also helps take her mind off of the pain she may have in her hands. “My biggest vision is to be able to let [people with RA] know that they can live their lives with hope and with as much energy as they possibly can,” Wren says.
Creating art has always been all about joy.”
Wren’s daughter, Cary Nicole “Nikki” Vandever, is not only one of her biggest fans, but she’s also following in her mom’s artistic footsteps.
“It’s fantastic that my mom has been able to use artwork to overcome arthritis as opposed to just living with it,” Nikki says. “She’s an activist. She gets to travel and talk to so many different people. And, she’s not just giving them information; she’s giving them her own experience, her own life. She can empathize and be a support for them.”
“Creating art has always been all about joy for me,” Wren says. “Drawing transports me, relaxes me, and gives my overactive imagination an outlet. If something I’ve created gives others even a moment of joy, I’ve done my job.”