Every Sunday for the past 38 years, Florence Hill has opened her studio to "the artful pack."
Every. Single. Sunday.
Watergate was winding down and the Captain & Tennille were cranking out hits when Hill first started celebrating Sunday by tuning in a classical station, brewing a pot of coffee and slicing a loaf of home-baked sweet bread to welcome artists to the Florence Hill Drawing Co-op.
Since then, the rules haven't changed. "No pre-registration, no instruction, no critique," said Hill.
Nor has the day.
If Christmas, New Year's or July 4th falls on a Sunday, the co-op meets just the same. "They don't have to call to make sure we're on," she said. "If they want to work, they show up."
And show up they do. While a few artists try the co-op once or twice, a surprising number have returned weekly for years — even decades. "This is art church," said commercial artist Greg Lipelt of Minneapolis, a co-op regular. "Art is our religion and this is where we have our fellowship. This is our whetstone, where we sharpen our tools."
Hill, who, at 83 continues to sell, show and exhibit, said she started the co-op for a simple reason: "I paint better Monday when I draw on Sunday," she said. "It keeps the hand and eye trained."

