OBITUARIES
Mary Chaney, 77; Freelance Courtroom Artist Covered Many High-Profile
Trials
By Dennis McLellan - Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 16, 2005
Mary Chaney, a Los Angeles courtroom artist whose meticulous and
delicate drawing style provided local and national television viewers
with telling glimpses of high-profile trials, including that of "Night
Stalker" Richard Ramirez and Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss, has died.
She was 77.
Chaney died Wednesday of cancer at her home in Los Angeles, according
to her family.
A commercial illustrator, Chaney launched her freelance career in the
courtroom in the mid-1980s. Over the years, she provided sketches for
ABC, NBC, CNN, Fox, KTTV, Court TV and other news outlets.
"She loved the hustle of the courtroom and meeting the judges,
prosecutors and defense attorneys, and also working with the news
reporters," said her daughter, Lark Ireland-Snouffer.
Among the better-known cases Chaney covered were the 1992 trial of the
LAPD officers accused of beating Rodney G. King, the O.J. Simpson
civil trial and the Richard Miller FBI espionage trial.
"It's like walking a tightrope without a net," Chaney told The Times
during the King trial in 1993. "Anyone who's 20 feet away like those
in the courtroom is hard to draw." By the end of the trial, Chaney
figured she would have sketched nearly 300 courtroom scenes.
"She was always very conscientious and loved her craft, as we all do,"
said courtroom artist Bill Robles, a longtime friend.
Mona Shafer Edwards, another courtroom artist, said her friend Chaney
"was incredibly disciplined and had a true passion for art and for
drawing."
"We had a very different way of working," she said. Chaney's courtroom
drawings were "thoughtful, meticulous, delicate, well-planned,"
Edwards said. "She'd look five times from the paper to the object
before she'd put a line down."
Chaney's vibrant and vivid courtroom sketches, which bore broad
strokes from her colored markers, have been published in several law
reviews. Her sketches of the King trial were exhibited at the Museum
of Tolerance in Los Angeles, and her drawings of a trial over Thai
garment workers are included in the Smithsonian Institution's National
Museum of American History.
In 1998, a number of her courtroom drawings were among those of
Southern California courtroom artists displayed at the Lankershim Arts
Center.
In a review of the display for The Times, Josef Woodard took note of
Chaney's drawing of Fleiss shedding a tear when she was convicted of
three counts of pandering in 1994.
The various artists' drawings on display, Woodard wrote, "don't
necessarily impress with their artistic skill, by any conventional
standard. The beauty is in the immediacy and what it represents. This
is pragmatic art, concerned with accurate reportage but also with fast
production, with working on the fly. At the same time, these artists
are seeking to capture something essential, snatched from a real
life."
Spending days and weeks sitting close to some defendants and listening
to sometimes gruesome testimony occasionally took a toll on Chaney,
particularly in the case of serial killer Ramirez, who was convicted
of 13 counts of murder and sentenced to die in the gas chamber.
"You could never get over the testimony of Judith Arnold, who found
her parents. Or her sister that identified the mother's wedding ring,"
Chaney told The Times in 1989. "Or even the policemen - policemen who
have seen too much. Too many murders. There's just something in their
eyes, in their expression."
Chaney, who made more than 100 sketches of Ramirez for television news
programs, remembered having nightmares in which she awakened with a
chill and saw the Night Stalker at her bedside.
"He'd just be standing there," she said. Usually, nothing happened,
she said, "but in another nightmare, he did kill me."
The guilty verdict, Chaney said, was a relief.
Born in Los Angeles in 1927, Chaney graduated from Otis Art Institute,
Chouinard Art Institute and Loyola Marymount University.
While raising her family in Huntington Park in the 1950s through the
mid '70s, she converted her large laundry room into an art studio,
where she painted, sculpted and did sketches of her children and
neighbors. She also gave painting lessons to adults.
Chaney, who lived more than 20 years on Bunker Hill in downtown Los
Angeles and could walk to work in the nearby courthouses, had a
passion for the homeless and street people.
She titled a series of her drawings of the homeless, which were
exhibited in downtown Los Angeles in the '80s, "A Tender Dignity."
In addition to her daughter Lark, Chaney is survived by her other
children, Robert Waterman-Reilly, Philip Reilly, Annie Cook, Kathleen
Snyder, Paul Reilly and Rachel Reilly; four grandchildren; one
great-grandchild; and her brother, Donald Chaney.
A memorial service will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Maryknoll
Japanese Catholic Center, 234 S. Hewitt St., in Los Angeles.
"It's not that I'm afraid to die. I just don't want to be there when it happens." - Woody Allen
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