Helen
Van Wyk
By Jan
Claire
Millions recognize Helen
Van Wyk as the host of PBS Television's "Welcome to
my Studio" which, for many years, was a breath of
fresh air on TV for artists who wanted to know more
about their craft. Rather than introducing a formula
for making paintings, Helen took the time to teach
the reasoning behind every brush stroke and its value
in reaching the goal of a finished work. I remember
watching her show and being mesmerized, not by her
creation of a painting, but by her absolute clarity
of knowledge and her astounding ability to convey
complex thoughts in a matter of a few always informal
words. "Put that cast shadow right underneath that
vase," she'd say. "Park it's little carcass...because
without it, the vase will appear to float." Always
the why. Always the reason. Always a very clear instruction.
She was a note taker's dream as I found out in studying
with her. She had an ability to make everything seem
right. And oh yes, if you were doing something wrong,
you'd hear about that, too! No foolishness allowed.
"Painting isn't fun!" she would say, "It's a battle
between you and that canvas as you try to turn its
flat 2-dimsenionalness into a 3-dimensional being!"
I
never took any time to ask her about her life before
I got to know her - first by telephone, then by studying
with her at her studio and home on Massachusetts'
beautiful Cape Ann. I hear she was born in Fair Lawn,
New Jersey and - like me - was painting seriously
by age 12. She studied with Ralph Entwistle and her
biggest influence, Maxmillian Rasko - a portrait painter
and teacher. Soon as she got her own "legs" as an
artist she, too, was off teaching people the wonders
of good technique. Thousands have studied with her
in her painting demonstrations around the country
and came away the better for it.
In 1990 she began her PBS
television series - the same year she was diagnosed
with cancer. She continued unabated, going full tilt
with television shows, demonstrations and commissioned
paintings. I last saw her in Cape Ann in June of 1994.
She told me the continuous release "radiation bullet"
they had installed in her, as well as her continual
visualization of her tumor growing smaller was, apparently
working. But we all could tell she wasn't anywhere
near 100%. She said she and her husband, cartoonist
Herb Rogoff, had decided to spend Winter down in Florida
because she couldn't take the cold Rockport winters
any more.
The
seminar I was attending was 8 hours or more a day,
5 days a week - and on weekends she would prepare
for the next one! She was not well at all, but plowed
through the daily sessions with an incredible deftness,
humor, and energy. She may have not felt well, but
when she was standing in "her place", palette in hand,
canvas at the ready, she was a tiger and a fountain
of valuable information. Pin-drop silence in a room
of 40 people is awe inspiring as her students learned
and learned.
Her
classes ranged from beginners to professionals and
yet everyone walked away having learned new things.
This particular seminar was one in which nobody but
Helen painted. Everyone, however, had to bring a painting
for critique on which the artist didn't mind if Helen
painted corrections while giving valuable lessons
on corrections - which is what painting is: "a record
of a series of corrections".
This master artist divested
herself of 50 years of knowledge, selfessly and with
exceeding charm, an earthy humor, and with solid truth.
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