Midsummer Song
Photography by Henry Domke
Painting by Cesar Rodrigues
Design by L’Attitude Art

After 20 years as a family practice physician, Henry Domke began studying fine art in a graduate program at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Much of his art is based on the native plants and animals that he finds exploring his backyard, in central Missouri.

“The very best part of my job is hearing stories from patients who’ve seen one of my pictures in a hospital or doctor’s office and have been moved by it. There was the gentleman who was sure I photographed his grandparents’ farm, where he used to spend his childhood summers. And the woman who would come to the hospital early for radiation treatment, just so she could meditate on one of my pictures before her procedure. That’s why, after a fulfilling career as a doctor, I continue to work, to create, and I hope, to heal.”

Cesar Rodrigues is an abstract painter who is on a lifelong mission to inspire and empower people through the power of visual storytelling. Throughout the course of his artistic career, his work has been showcased at the Artsworcester Gallery and sold at the Davis Gallery.Born in Brockton, Cesar was diagnosed with SMA type 2 and given only a few years to live. While it is a progressive disease and a dire diagnosis, he never gave up hope. During most of his childhood, he was in and out of hospitals dealing with pneumonia and surgeries. However, it is in that sterile setting that his passion for art was born. What served as his inspiration were all the vibrant drawings hanging on the walls, and he would spend hours attempting to draw them in a similar style. It wasn’t long before the nurses took notice and encouraged his seemingly divine spark of inspiration by bringing him boxes of crayons and colored pencils at his bedside. Drawing soon took over his mind and all the needles and medications didn’t seem to faze him anymore.

Initially, Cesar was a realism painter, with an affinity for painting people, landscapes, and animals. The older he got, the stronger his mind became; however, his drawing hand became weaker. By the age of 18, that weakness was more evident, and his hand eventually got so weak, he could no longer adequately draw with it. Fortunately, there was a light at the end of the tunnel. Right before graduating high school, his art teacher restored his hope by sharing some abstract art with him that a former student created. But what really restored it is the time when his teacher found a big blue canvas in the trash and painted his first abstract painting with him, which became a textbook case of “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” The spark for the abstract was there, but it wasn’t until losing the strength in his right hand entirely, that he truly took a more abstract path with his artwork by using his left hand instead. Alas, that hand also got weaker, but he still pushed forward without losing his optimism and he got resourceful and designed a 2d painting system that would assist him in painting. He reached out to Easterseals for some help, and they funded and built his very own painting system.