When Linda Billet quit her job as a mail carrier 15 years ago to pursue her dream of being a glass artisan, her mother was her biggest cheerleader.
“She loved everything I made, and she understood how I loved to use my art to make people happy,” said Billet, a Hummelstown resident whose glass mosaics will grace the walls of Penn State Health Lime Spring Outpatient Center ― Hematology/Oncology in East Hempfield Township, Lancaster County.
In just four months from diagnosis to passing, Billet lost her mother to pancreatic cancer, which means she knows the feel of the spaces where her art will hang – where hope and fear dance an unwieldy duet and the stomach drops when test results return bad news.
“My pieces are about hope and ongoing life,” said Billet as she points out the “grandmother” tree in the middle of one of her mosaics and the “nurse log” – a fallen tree near it. “Did you know that a ‘nurse log’ is a real thing? It’s called that because it supports new life by giving habitat to the seedlings.”
The effort to involve local artists in decorating the wall spaces at Lime Spring Outpatient Center is intentional. Center Stage Arts in Health offers a variety of art and music programs throughout Penn State Health, based on the belief that thoughtfully chosen artistic engagement is an integral part of health and well-being, said Keeley Engle, coordinator of Center Stage – Penn State Cancer Institute Arts in Health.