Eunice was born in South Albany, VT in 1927. As her mother and grandmother before her, she
learned the skills of domestic arts: knitting, sewing and embroidery, making rugs and quilts, but
she also loved to draw and paint. She drew on paper bags, in soapsuds, on steamed up windows.
From her mother, Eunice learned needlework and a love of experimenting with color. She
enjoyed embroidery because it was very like painting. After highschool, Eunice taught school for
a year and that summer, with her earnings took art classes at Boston's Museum School of Fine
Arts. She had found her passion and she longed to continue, but her father told her that studying
art would not help her earn a living. In 1948 Eunice married Bob Kinsey and they moved to their
dairy farm the next year. With barn work, field work, the garden, sugaring, the wood pile and
raising seven children, Eunice didn't have much extra time for artistic endeavours.
Once her
children and husband had gone to college, Eunice began to consider it. She took some studio
courses. Another year the Kinseys sold a cow and paid her tuition for a semester. Eventually
Eunice earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Arts with a teaching certificate from Johnson
State College. Eunice teaches private art classes, works as a mentor and continues to paint. These
paintings and their descriptions, she created for her family to show them what life
had been like.
Eunice's paintingsas well as quilts, needlework and lace created by members of her familyare currently on exhibit at the Vermont Folklife Center in Middlebury.