Carl Williams brings the outdoors in with canoe art

LIME ROCK — A stray remark by Carl Williams at the April 9 opening of an exhibit of some of his massive collection of canoe art at the Salisbury School led to a visit to his home last week.

The comment: With the items removed for exhibition, “I was able to hang stuff again.�

He wasn’t kidding.

The Williams home is chock full of canoe-related items — prints, photographs, models, catalogs, and half a canoe converted into a bookshelf.

Every wall in every room is pretty well covered — if not with canoe art, with mounted trout, caught in the wilds of Canada on one of the canoeing and camping trips Williams sponsored over the decades.

Even the insides of closet doors are decorated, with tin canoe advertisements.

As a decorator, Williams is not a one-note Johnny, however — the canoe motif is occasionally (and strategically) interrupted by woodstoves converted into end and coffee tables, or as receptacles for more items of ... canoe art.

Williams showed his visitor a red canoe model he commissioned in Jamaica — “In 1984, after a trip to the Arctic,� he added casually.

“Commissioned� is perhaps a grand term. “I asked ‘Would you carve me one?’ and he said ‘Sure.’�

The downstairs bathroom has 24 exhibits, including a series of Williams originals — tiles for the sink backsplash, showing canoeing scenes in a style that suggests a waterborne combination of Grandma Moses and the Rev. Howard Finster. A chair salvaged from the transfer station is similarly adorned.

As Williams rummaged around, he turned up some other items of interest — such as a pair of Cree snowshows, made in Rupert Bay, Quebec.

And he described the process of getting the four fat trout back from the northern wilderness for the taxidermist. The fish were completely gutted and scooped out on one side. “Then they went into a saltwater solution — thick enough to support a potato — for three days.

“Then they were packed in wet salt,� he said.

And, two months later, they were ready for the taxidermist.

Williams and Rod Beebe, a teacher at The Gunnery in Washington, Conn., bought Camp Kapitachouane in central Quebec in 1947 and operated it until 1987. The camp’s mission was teaching groups of up to nine boys how to be outdoorsmen.

“Small in size and run informally,� reads a camp brochure. “Teaches boys the fundamentals of camping and canoeing.�

The camp is still there; the land is leased but “we still own the buildings.�

“Lawyers who aren’t born yet are trying to figure out� the legalities of the situation, and while Williams stopped making the trip five years ago, his sons and their families still use it.

“Do I miss it?� he asked rhetorically. “You bet I do.�

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