Abby Maisel drew a picture to show the world how children near Oxford feel

Assistant Principal Rosa Everitt opened an email on her computer at Lake Orion High School to see an image of a giant dragon with tears cradling an exhausted wildcat.

"I cried as soon as I saw it," she said.

The digital artwork, drawn on an iPad by Abby Maisel, 17, a Lake Orion High School senior, is meant to show how children feel about their crosstown rivals at Oxford High School, she said.

Abby Maisel, 17, a senior at Lake Orion High School, drew artwork of a dragon comforting a wildcat to symbolize her classmates caring for their rivals after the Oxford shootings Nov. 30. She is seen here at home in Lake Orion on Aug. 21, 2021.
Abby Maisel, 17, a senior at Lake Orion High School, drew artwork of a dragon comforting a wildcat to symbolize her classmates caring for their rivals after the Oxford shootings Nov. 30. She is seen here at home in Lake Orion on Aug. 21, 2021.

The image of the Lake Orion mascot cradling the Oxford High mascot, in the wake of the tragedy of violence on Nov. 30at Oxford, has triggered a strong response on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Abby shared the image with her Art Club adviser, one of four art teachers at the high school, who then received permission from Abby to share it on social media.

Sam Rimi, an art teacher at Lake Orion High School and Art Club adviser, received artwork from 12th grader Abby Maisel and asked permission to share it with the world. He is seen here at Summer Dreams Farm in Oxford on Oct. 5, 2021.
Sam Rimi, an art teacher at Lake Orion High School and Art Club adviser, received artwork from 12th grader Abby Maisel and asked permission to share it with the world. He is seen here at Summer Dreams Farm in Oxford on Oct. 5, 2021.

"Students create artwork as a sense of therapy, just letting out their thoughts," said Sam Rimi, who has taught art at Lake Orion High for 10 years.

More: Oxford High School survivor Phoebe Arthur goes home: 'She is a fighter'

Staff members first saw the picture after virtual parent-teacher conferences ended Thursday.

"It just brought us to tears, it was so beautiful," said Heather Hammerl, who has worked for the district 22 years and is secretary to the Lake Orion principal. "We're rivals and we're wrapping our arms around Oxford. We feel for them. They're not far down the road and a lot of our people here know people there. I know some staff members that were involved. It's just been a very difficult, hard time."

The digital artwork, drawn on an iPad by senior Abby Maisel in 2.5 hours while sitting in her living room this week, is meant to show love and support to crosstown rivals.
The digital artwork, drawn on an iPad by senior Abby Maisel in 2.5 hours while sitting in her living room this week, is meant to show love and support to crosstown rivals.

The words above the drawing: Oxford Strong.

Homemade sympathy cards

On Wednesday, Abby went to Art Club, where the students were creating homemade sympathy cards for families affected by the Oxford shooting that left four students dead and seven gunshot victims who survived, including a teacher.

It's that time together with other artists that inspired Abby to create her original art, she said.

"Art really develops the whole mind applying critical thinking skills, using visual language, evoking emotion and applying knowledge from researching a topic," Rimi said. "That piece of art Abby shared with me, it was a powerful piece."

For Everitt, whose two boys attend Oxford Elementary, the image cut to her core.

"I’m a Dragon. But I live in Oxford and my children are Wildcats," she said.

Rosa Everitt, an assistant principal at Lake Orion High School, is seen with her sons Lucas and Aidan, right, at a University of Michigan football game in Ann Arbor on Nov. 6, 2021. The boys attend Oxford Elementary School.
Rosa Everitt, an assistant principal at Lake Orion High School, is seen with her sons Lucas and Aidan, right, at a University of Michigan football game in Ann Arbor on Nov. 6, 2021. The boys attend Oxford Elementary School.

"So it’s how I felt as a mother who wants to hold her babies, how I felt about how I want to hold my friends who are teachers in Oxford," Everitt said. "It’s just how I felt about holding all the people at Oxford High School, Middle School and Elementary school personally."

Everyone at the school knows someone directly affected, it seems. And this simple art piece said everything with no extra words at all, she said.

"Art, it is such a beautiful way to express how one feels. It has a meaning for the creator but, at the same time, can have 1,000 different meanings, 1,000 different people," Everitt said. "I'm just very blessed that Abby shared that with me and allowed me to share it with our community. It just shows how we all feel. Oxford is our sister school. We might be rivals when it comes to competition but we are one community. We are one family."

She is in her fourth year with the district, first as an assistant principal.

In times like this, Everitt said, "that picture was a reminder of how we have to be there for each other. We just have to be there."

Why she made it

Abby dreams of being a professional artist. She has been accepted to The Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia and the Ringling College of Art and Design in Sarasota, Florida.

She was astonished by the response to her drawing.

"I was immediately surprised by the love and support and the impact it was making on the community," Abby told the Free Press while traveling on a school trip for thespians.

"I really wasn't expecting it," she said. "I made it because I go to school almost 10 minutes away from Oxford. I wanted to emulate the idea that nobody is alone during this rough period. We’re in this together, no matter what."

Jennifer Maisel, Abby's mother, said parents always have fear when their children leave but recent days have brought terror closer to home.

"It drew up emotions we never want to face," she said.

John Maisel, a vice president of sales for an auto supplier, said his daughter's artwork "captured a lot of her raw emotion" while also helping outsiders feel more deeply what Oxford is experiencing.

"It is critical," he said.

'Rough time'

The trauma on the community is still fresh, Abby said.

"What happened at Oxford was beyond terrifying," she said. "Especially as a student, the idea of a group of people your age getting killed near you just makes things so much more real. I know a lot of people have had a really rough time processing it. I just wanted to give that comfort, I guess."

After Art Club, it all came together for Abby.

"I drew it in our living room as we were just having some downtime. I think it took about 2.5 hours. I got in my head and started thinking and drawing on my iPad and getting my ideas out," she said. "The idea is that nobody’s alone. We’re all here for each other."

Abby Maisel, right, with her mom, Jennifer, and dad, John, and brother, Jack, at home in Lake Orion on May 6, 2021. Abby is an artist in 12th grade at Lake Orion whose artwork has touched the hearts of Oxford after the Nov. 30, 2021 shootings.
Abby Maisel, right, with her mom, Jennifer, and dad, John, and brother, Jack, at home in Lake Orion on May 6, 2021. Abby is an artist in 12th grade at Lake Orion whose artwork has touched the hearts of Oxford after the Nov. 30, 2021 shootings.

More: Grandmother of Oxford school shooting victim Madisyn Baldwin pleads for help on GoFundMe

More: Support pours into grieving Oxford community. Here are ways to lend a hand.

Contact Phoebe Wall Howard: 313-222-6512 or phoward@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @phoebesaid. Read more on Ford and sign up for our autos newsletter.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: A drawing of a dragon and wildcat show how rivals feel for Oxford High