Former nurse's pandemic 'doodles' hung at hospitals

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Karen Reep painting at a deskImage source, Karen Reep
Image caption,

Karen Reep, who was a nurse for 39 years, said she was a big "doodler"

A retired nurse's "doodles" that captured the moments NHS staff went through during the Covid-19 pandemic have been hung at two hospitals.

Karen Reep, from Ampthill, Bedfordshire, said seeing her artwork at the Luton and Dunstable (L&D) and Bedford hospitals was "phenomenal".

Never formally trained, she said she started sketching her colleagues to show what they "went through".

"I was capturing a moment, I didn't want precision, I wanted a feeling."

Image source, Karen Reep
Image caption,

"Girl Power" showed hospital staff in their full PPE during the pandemic

Mrs Reep, 57, was a sister on the children's ward at the L&D for 30 years and retired from nursing in September.

She said she always painted as a hobby, but never went to art school as her parents told her to get "a proper job".

She realised the impact art could have in hospitals when her son, Ben, developed a brain tumour 10 years ago.

The first hospital he was treated had "bare walls and it was so depressing as there was nothing for me to look at or lighten the atmosphere", she said.

When he was transferred to Addenbrooke's in Cambridge, she said the "wards and corridors were full of pictures, art, photographs, things to take that pressure off and the children's ward was amazing, it was so colourful".

Image source, Karen Reep
Image caption,

Mrs Reep captured her colleagues taking an overdue break in 2020, to make sure people do not "forget what we went through"

Image source, Karen Reep
Image caption,

Mrs Reep sketched her first "doodle" during a Covid-19 meeting and said "everyone looked sad and they all had masks on"

Explaining what it was like working through the pandemic, she said "staff were terrified and frightened".

"When Covid hit, it was such a surreal time that I decided to draw what I saw in really fast sketches," said Mrs Reep.

"I was capturing a moment, I didn't want precision, I wanted a feeling.

"I'm a big doodler, I wanted the staff to feel like I was capturing them, what they were doing.

"I didn't want anyone to forget what we went through in Covid and I wanted all staff to have memories."

Her work caught the eye of the "take heART" team at Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust, which chose a selection from 70 pieces Mrs Reep created.

Image source, Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Image caption,

Mrs Reep, with her former colleague Afiza and "take heART" co-founder Dr Sheena McLaggan, stand by some of the artwork that has been displayed

Image source, Karen Reep
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Artwork featuring Mrs Reep's colleague Afiza was called "Distraction"

Seeing them on display, Mrs Reep said: "It's just brilliant, it's phenomenal."

"I just want the pictures for future generations to see this massive event, that impacted people's lives - I want some reflection."

Image source, Karen Reep
Image caption,

"A little humour always helps when we are scared during Covid," Mrs Reep said about this piece of artwork

Dr Rachel Chater, one of the founders of the project, said: "This collection of pictures depicts a range of moments in time, both during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic and the months that followed.

"Karen's wonderful use of line work and colour captures the people, their connection with each other and our imagination."

Image source, Karen Reep
Image caption,

Mrs Reep said she wanted "something that was of a moment" and captured a sketch of pharmacists at work

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