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Obituaries: Esther Cason Baylor
August 17th, 2005

Obituaries: Mildred Yearty Hodges 1912-2005
August 13th, 2005

Obituaries: Michael Williamson
July 31st, 2005

Obituaries: Julie Yearty
July 7th, 2005

Obituaries: Services for Mildred Rain Owens
May 13th, 2005

Obituaries: Services for Norman Cason
January 24th, 2005

Obituaries: Services for Doris White - Chapman
November 28th, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Robert A. Hammiel
November 11th, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Donald Arthur Thibodeau
October 2nd, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Frances C. Pack
September 22nd, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Mathilda Josefsberg
September 9th, 2004

Obituaries: Services for William Airth-Kindree
September 8th, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Bruce A. Young
August 25th, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Joel R. Beck
August 19th, 2004

Obituaries: Services for Ida Belle Davis
June 28th, 2004

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Obituary: Lola Roppel

Obituary: Lola Roppel

Special to Cedar Key News


Lola at age 15

Lola Roppel, 77, a Cedar Key artist and a founding member of the Cedar Key Poets, died January 19 in Gainesville, FL. "She painted as long as she could, and she was content as long as she could paint," said her daughter Meredith Henry.

Opening an accordion file of papers in search of examples of her mother's poetry, Meredith exclaimed, "It smells like Lola!" Inhaling deeply, Meredith added, "Estee Lauder's YOUTH DEW, and cigarettes!"

Born Lola Burkowsky in Brooklyn, NY, in 1930, she met her husband Richard Meredith Roppel in Washington, D.C. in 1949. Dick spotted Lola's work in a D. C. gallery, they met, and they remained together until Dick's death in 1996.


Before retiring to Cedar Key in 1982, the couple lived in New Haven, CT, where both attended Yale University, and in Columbus, OH; Savannah, GA; and East Lansing, MI. While Dick completed graduate study and was employed as a biophysicist, Lola continued to study and to paint.


"They loved one another very much, although they were polar opposites," said Lola and Dick's daughter Laurie Frottier. "She had a very open mind – and he had some pretty strange ideas. She was grounded in reality; he was the absent-minded professor."


At the Yale University School of Design, Lola studied with Josef Albers and Bernard Chaet. She studied also at the Art Students League in New York and with Hoyt L. Sherman and Sidney Chafetz at Ohio State University.


Lola often painted from a distinctive stance, her daughter Meredith recalled, folding at the waist and working on the floor (rather than on a table or easel) with large, loose strokes. In later years, she worked on a smaller scale, principally in watercolor.


Asked if he thought Lola could have painted in watercolor as well as in acrylics from her bent-at-the-waist stance, the Gainesville framer Don Cavanaugh said, "Lola was a determined little lady. If she wanted to do it, she'd do it."

In addition to Lola and Dick's daughter Meredith, of Gainesville, and their son Thaddeus Roppel, of Auburn, AL, Lola is survived by Meredith's daughter, Rebekkah Carney, Rebekkah's husband Ben, and Rebekkah and Ben's soon-to-be-adoptive son Shannon Moore, all of Bloomsbury, NJ,; by Meredith's long-time sweetheart Charlie Hyde; and by Thaddeus's wife Tammy and their daughter Sara.


Lola and Dick's second daughter was born in New Haven and raised by an adoptive family in Guilford, CT. In 1983, that daughter – now Laurie Frottier of Wellfleet, MA – located and reunited with Lola and Dick. Lola is survived also by Laurie's husband Jean Frottier and children Emmett Lynn, Adra Grace Lynn, and Annalise Frottier.


Meredith Henry is organizing a memorial celebration of Lola and Dick Roppel's lives, to take place in Cedar Key.


Lola painting with her granddaughter, Sara

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