Patricia Holub rarely paints anymore.
âMy husband did all the framing and when he passed five years ago I havenât painted much since,â said Holub.
Her husbandâs framing helped her keep track of how many paintings she sold since she started painting in 1970.
âHe had stickers that said âFrames by Frankâ and he told me heâd used 1,000 stickers,â said Holub.
The 93 year-old painter and long-time Carson City resident is still plenty busy, though.
âI wouldnât want to be dull and boring,â she said.
The Carson City Visitors Bureau hosted an exhibit of her landscape paintings in July and Charlie Blim, owner, Charlie B Gallery, is talking to her about another exhibit soon featuring both Holubâs work and that of 22 year-old sculptor Logan Peterson.
She works most Fridays in the art gallery of the Brewery Arts Center, an organization she helped found in 1974.
âWe needed culture in Carson City. We bought the brewery, 12 of us, and thatâs how we got it,â said Holub.
Sheâs involved in raising funds for education as a member of Chapter X of the Philanthropic Educational Organization, which established Cottey College in Nevada, Missouri, attended by Holubâs daughter Terry.
And then thereâs Bridge, every Wednesday in Carson City and every Thursday in Genoa.
âGertrude Gottschalk plays both Bridge clubs. Sheâs a 100,â said Holub. âSheâs a sweetheart, a beautiful person.â
Holub, who has three children, also has three grandchildren, twin great granddaughters and now one great-great grandson who are all in the area.
Holub grew up in San Francisco. Her mother, a light opera singer, sang in Virginia Cityâs Piper Opera House before Holub was born, and her father sold cars.
Holub stayed in the Bay Area, married a sailor, had three children, then came to Virginia City in 1958 to establish residency to seek a divorce.
Soon after, she married her second husband, Frank, whom she had met in California, and the couple never left.
The pair looked for work in Reno, but Holub, a meat wrapper, found a job at Safeway in Carson City.
âI was a member of the butchersâ union,â said Holub.
Her husband found work with the State of Nevada, where he worked for 35 years until he retired.
âHe was a perfect husband,â she said.
And every Wednesday she painted, no matter where she was.
Now, Holub keeps her house full of alstroemeria, a type of lily her husband always bought for her.
Her paintings, both oils and water colors, fill the house, too, alongside paintings from friends and teachers she met over the years, including Virginia Harsh and Rhoda Shed.
She lives in the same house she and her husband bought in 1960, now with Honey, her five-year old dog who likes to dig in the backyard.
âI love Carson City and wouldnât live anywhere else,â said Holub.