![]() When she painted larger scenes, such as a view from a town, she depicted narrow streets, canals, or the view of a church. She was a master of still life and the close portrait. In a 1985 interview for Irish Arts Review, interviewer Brian Fallon observed that her paintings are often done “in fairly close-up perspective, in a strong but even light, and in relatively shallow space, with a fairly sharp focus.” One can observe this common feature by looking at the collection of her paintings available at, the site maintained by her family and friends. In the last-mentioned place, she was honored by having one of her paintings depicted on a postage stamp and by a retrospective of her work at the Royal Hibernian Academy. ![]() A native of the Netherlands, who lived for periods of time in the United States and for the last thirty-two years of her life in England, she was also a painter who had shows in the U.S., Canada, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Ireland. ![]() Hilda van Stockum (1908-2006) is mostly remembered for her children’s books. The Winged Watchman, by Hilda van Stockum (191 pages, Bethlehem Books, 1997) Who knew a great war story would ultimately be a mother’s tale? ![]() ![]() The close-up tasks of the women are just as heroic as the tasks of the men who often fought to protect their loved ones. Verhagen gives “The Winged Watchman,” Hilda van Stockum’s novel about a Dutch family during World War II, such power. ![]()
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