| In the course of the 16th and 17th century, painting in the Low Countries -     as the Netherlands were then called - developed an original type of realist     painting. The Low Countries liberated themselves from Spanish rule in a long     war from 1568 till 1648 and settled for a typical bourgeois nation, with a prince     symbolically at its head but mainly ruled by representatives of the citizens.     This war for indepencence made a deep impact upon national identity: great neighbouring     nations were suspected, individual freedom and enterprise encouraged. The absence     of a court culture, together with an increasing general wealth during the 17th     century when the Netherlands were a very important factor in European trade     and politics, made a highly individual and bourgeois art possible. Commissions     for paintings did not come from a powerful church or court, but from individual     citizens, often wealthy merchants. But also lower middle-class people commissioned     paintings: visitors from abroad observed, to their astonishment, that high-quality     paintings were a normal and common ornament in bakeries, butcher shops, inns,     and in any household which had some money to spend on a nice interior. With     the rich merchants, portraits were popular, and with the middle- and lower classes,     imagery from the environment of their daily life were much in demand: street     scenes, interiors, and all places where people got together. Paintings were,     all in all, considered as a sane investment: one could always sell them in times     of economic difficulties.   Hence, a typical tradition was born, in which real life depictions mirrored     the buyer's environment. While subjects could be rather pedestrian and unassuming,     in the hands of a real master the pictural qualities could rise to olympian     heights, as the works of Rembrandt, Vermeer, Hals, van Mieris, Heda, Steen,     ter Borch, Metsu, Cuyp, van Ruysdael, van de Velde en Kalf demonstrate. Characteristic     is that many of the painters depicted their own, personal environment, sometimes     even restricted to their own rooms as in Vermeer. This tradition faded away     at the end of the 17th century when, with the rise of France as a cultural force,     painters began to meet the increasing demand of 'chique' painting, not tainted     with the 'vulgarity' of daily life, following the fashions of the French court.  In the 18th century, Dutch painting reached a low ebb     only to be revived in the course of the second half of the 19th century. The     genre of 'environmental realist painting' was occasionally taken-up again, and     sustained itself since then as a typical but marginal phenomenon, untill modernism     in the 20th century seemed to seal it definitely to the 'museum of the past'.     But after the Second World War, realist painting again appeared as a subversive     counter-movement, in protest to the 'official' abstract painting and conceptual     art, finding its way to foreign collectors and galleries. Henk Helmantel, Matthijs     Röling, and many other artists ignored the mainstream fashions and followed     their own creative instincts; genres like portraits, interiors and still-lifes     could apparantly still offer inexhaustible variation and individual interpretation.     The official museums however, keen on following international trends of concept     art, to this day ignore the re-emergence of Dutch realist art, oblivious of     the gradual change currently occurring in the western art world where realist     art of any kind is at many places already an accepted option, next to all the     other options. The work of Wim Heldens occupies an individual place     in the contemporary art scene of the Netherlands. Understanding that the re-emergence     of realist art as a counter movement to modernism was opening-up new perspectives,     and realising that his main interest was the human condition and life as it     unfolded around him, he quickly discovered that his talents could best develop     in the portrait genre and the context of ordinary life, thereby picking-up an     old Dutch tradition. But although much of his technique is traditional, the     imagery is contemporary, and it is in this combination of the 'old' and the     'new' that Heldens found his originality. Wim heldens was born in 1954 in Sittard, in the south     of the Netherlands. He showed an obsessive fascination with drawing from an     early age and when he applied to various academies, he already had an impressive     body of work. Nevertheless, his unusual talent was not recognized and he was     not admitted. Disappointed, but still determined, he applied to the Kunstacademie     in Frankfurt (Germany) in 1974 and was immediately accepted. But when the good     news came, he had just moved to Amsterdam and decided that, now he had proven     his worth to himself, he preferred to go his own way.Making a living from portrait     commissions, Heldens developed the genre as a means to explore the human condition     in a more general way. While around him the modernist revolution was gradually     being accepted as a general norm, Heldens explored renaissance techniques and     three- and two-dimensional form, including abstract structural patterns (the     influence of abstract notions of form is always very close under the surface).     Also, the treatment of light by masters of Dutch 17th century painting like     Vermeer, Terborch and Nicolaes Maes held his fascination. He began to be asked     regularly for exhibitions in galleries in the Netherlands. Various trips to     Italy in the seventies were a great stimulation; the greatest impression in     these years was the psychologically dramatic work of Carravagio.The discovery     of the art world in New York opened a new field of stimulation and experience.     In the period 1990 - 95 Heldens divided his time between New York and Amsterdam,     easily mixing in the exciting American artistic community where he, within a     couple of months, saw his work on show at the Henoch gallery in SoHo, later     to be followed with exposure at the Ganymede Gallery and the Open Studio PS122,     both in NY City. The wide variety of different trends - from abstract via pop     art to photo realism - which he saw in East Village, where he had a studio,     gave him the inner freedom and confidence to pursue and further develop his     psychological realism. He viewed his personal style as a possible way forward     after modernism had lost most of its credibility. He painted various portraits     in commission, among others for the collector Raymond Saroff, who possesses     an impressive collection of American native art. In 1995 Heldens participated     in the exhibition 'Representation Represented' in the Arnot Museum in Elmira     (NY) together with Janet Fish, Gregory Gillespie, Paul Cadmus, Claudio Bravo     and Michael Leonard, where Heldens' contribution drew much attention.From 1995     onwards, Heldens increasingly focussed on Amsterdam where he found his canvasses     more and more in demand. In later years, he increasingly embarked upon free,     i.e. not commissioned, paintings, to be able to concentrate upon a more versatile     expression of human drama in contemporary life. The psychology behind his work     gradually became more complex and ambiguous, claire-obscure more striking, contrasts     sharper - all along with a continuously developing technique. |