Amazing gift: Family of teen killed in tubing accident receives portrait


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SANDY — A heartwarming delivery was made Monday from a Huntsville, Weber County, artist to a central Utah family who lost their daughter. Eighteen-year-old Kirsten Beagley was killed in a tragic tubing accident two months ago this week.

Not a day or hour goes by that Janell and Kyle Beagley don't think about their precious daughter.

"I break down and cry multiple times a day," Janell Beagley said.

"Internal pain that just hurts," Kyle Beagley said.

Kirsten was a beloved senior at Emery High School in Castle Dale and was tubing in January with a group of friends as part of their activity for the winter formal. The tube she was on overshot the landing and went out into the dry road, where she suffered a fatal injury.

On Monday, artist JR Johansen showed up at a family member's home in Sandy to deliver a precious package.

"Hoping it will be a joyful, comforting experience for them," Johansen told KSL-TV as he walked up to the front door of the home. Monday was the first time the family met Johansen in person.

For the past seven years, Johansen has painted more than 175 portraits of missionaries who have died while serving. Last year, he also painted all 19 children and two teachers killed in the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting that happened in May of 2022. He's also been a part of other projects painting service men and women who have died while serving, along with other youth whose lives were cut short.

He says he saw the story about Kirsten and was moved to share his gifts with the Beagley family who don't live far from where he was born and raised.

"You mind if I just open it now?" Kyle Beagley asked.

"It's beautiful. Thank you," Kyle Beagley said as he became emotional. The whole family, which included Kirsten's three siblings, paused with emotion and stared at the painting.

The Beagley family opens a portrait of their daughter who died in a tubing accident.
The Beagley family opens a portrait of their daughter who died in a tubing accident. (Photo: Stuart Johnson, KSL-TV)

"It looks exactly like Kirsten. I love her smile," 6-year-old Ky Beagley said. "I love her smile. I love her necklace. I love her hair, and I love her eyes."

"We are just so grateful for him for offering to do the portrait, and it's just an amazing gift," Janell Beagley said. "I've always just loved her beautiful blue eyes, just felt that connection (in the painting)."

"Her eyes, the hair, her posture, it's just her, and we love it, and we are just so grateful for it. Very meaningful," Kyle Beagley said.

"It just makes her look alive," Jannika, Kirsten's older sister, said.

"Her eyes are just gorgeous," Clarissa, Kirsten's younger sister, said.

Johansen said he can never imagine what the family is going through, but as he paints the portrait he begins to feel a little bit of that pain.

"It's a very emotional experience, usually, for me," he said. "She was still a teenager and so talented and had such a bright future ahead."

The family says this is a gift that will continue to bring comfort in the days and years ahead.

"I know I will look at it every day, multiple times," Janell Beagley said.

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