Janet: Art
Janet and I went to high school together, and to the same church. She was lighthearted and fun, and people took us for sisters. We double-dated. Ate lunch together with our crowd. We were not "A" listers--not cheerleaders, nor "brains." We were fun enough that some of the A listers drifted in and out of our parties and participation in our service club. And we were smart enough, solid B students.
Janet was a painter of amazing talent. Her portraits were loose, light and captured the essence of the subject. Her brother was a friend of the painter Jamie Wyeth, and Janet admired his work immensely. It showed.
I loved art class, and had an aptitude for it. But Janet's gift outshone mine, and everyone else's. Years later, when I was working at the university, one of her professors told me Janet was one of the most talented students she'd ever had.
At university, we were in the same math class, struggling to pass. Our graduate assistant lacked an aptitude for teaching, and of the many sections enrolled that semester, ours had the lowest grades. Janet drew a caricature of Mr. D___, during an especially frustrating class--ripple-soled shoes, slide rule dangling from his belt, toupee awry, at the blackboard saying, "Oh my, I have too many y's here..." A refreshing moment on the way to an F in the class.
When we shared an apartment, she drew a silverpoint portrait of me on a small oval plaque. It was for one of her class assignments. She told me it was a challenging assignment. The portrait was beautiful and delicate.
I came home one day and she was working on a plaster body cast, ala George Segal. When it was finished, we had a life-size sculpture of Janet, in workshirt and jeans, permanently inhabiting a corner of our living room. It was great fun.
(To be continued...)
Saturday, September 20, 2008
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