The Prague Post - 'Windmill love' sees Dutch artist become mill operator

EUR -
AED 4.198995
AFN 74.307287
ALL 93.798392
AMD 419.687826
ANG 2.046771
AOA 1049.449072
ARS 1700.410959
AUD 1.646774
AWG 2.060601
AZN 1.92544
BAM 1.956947
BBD 2.301888
BDT 140.856572
BGN 1.932998
BHD 0.431034
BIF 3406.707097
BMD 1.14319
BND 1.478599
BOB 7.915259
BRL 5.866626
BSD 1.14294
BTN 108.974373
BWP 15.522373
BYN 3.266544
BYR 22406.529903
BZD 2.298858
CAD 1.619489
CDF 2579.03737
CHF 0.922095
CLF 0.026941
CLP 1060.310165
CNY 7.76552
CNH 7.769013
COP 3767.875209
CRC 519.94574
CUC 1.14319
CUP 30.294543
CVE 110.718308
CZK 24.256269
DJF 203.167834
DKK 7.475314
DOP 67.162338
DZD 152.236699
EGP 56.721332
ERN 17.147855
ETB 182.195935
FJD 2.554691
FKP 0.855633
GBP 0.85293
GEL 3.017765
GGP 0.855633
GHS 13.072375
GIP 0.855633
GMD 83.45316
GNF 10037.210546
GTQ 8.720121
GYD 239.094374
HKD 8.958365
HNL 30.723197
HRK 7.532939
HTG 149.570691
HUF 357.224278
IDR 20656.305552
ILS 3.447119
IMP 0.855633
INR 109.396683
IQD 1498.15089
IRR 1571886.664435
ISK 143.412926
JEP 0.855633
JMD 181.806601
JOD 0.810496
JPY 185.636892
KES 147.746407
KGS 99.969763
KHR 4584.192789
KMF 492.715132
KPW 1028.871671
KRW 1723.508319
KWD 0.35392
KYD 0.952563
KZT 534.355653
LAK 25778.941244
LBP 102372.691384
LKR 383.291153
LRD 207.63198
LSL 18.657454
LTL 3.375543
LVL 0.691504
LYD 7.322116
MAD 10.694533
MDL 20.077123
MGA 4910.002533
MKD 61.662007
MMK 2400.334112
MNT 4100.236363
MOP 9.226031
MRU 45.813316
MUR 53.890111
MVR 17.674006
MWK 1984.578232
MXN 20.032694
MYR 4.66077
MZN 73.060971
NAD 18.657197
NGN 1575.133269
NIO 41.903656
NOK 11.121658
NPR 174.338397
NZD 1.986396
OMR 0.439579
PAB 1.14297
PEN 3.887982
PGK 5.006887
PHP 70.386032
PKR 318.006949
PLN 4.331147
PYG 6953.076885
QAR 4.168872
RON 5.236039
RSD 117.359585
RUB 87.195916
RWF 1676.488577
SAR 4.28888
SBD 9.219876
SCR 15.00666
SDG 686.4836
SEK 11.051249
SGD 1.477122
SHP 0.853507
SLE 27.837118
SLL 23972.13321
SOS 653.334031
SRD 42.985083
STD 23661.731142
STN 24.692911
SVC 10.001083
SYP 126.359222
SZL 18.668246
THB 38.144259
TJS 10.567096
TMT 4.012598
TND 3.365267
TOP 2.752528
TRY 53.641953
TTD 7.755666
TWD 36.745609
TZS 3007.725652
UAH 50.878332
UGX 4211.990695
USD 1.14319
UYU 45.957952
UZS 13735.431969
VES 799.489683
VND 30060.188969
VUV 136.900955
WST 3.172907
XAF 656.350458
XAG 0.019064
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.089529
XCG 2.060017
XDR 0.816207
XOF 654.473934
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.053901
ZAR 18.662496
ZMK 10290.081015
ZMW 20.60308
ZWL 368.106811
  • RBGPF

    -0.4600

    67.86

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.02

    +0.05%

  • NGG

    -1.2100

    82.32

    -1.47%

  • RIO

    0.6900

    89.49

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    -0.0500

    52.47

    -0.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.31

    -0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    21.32

    -0.61%

  • BP

    -0.6600

    38.55

    -1.71%

  • BTI

    -0.5200

    60.87

    -0.85%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    32.07

    +0.06%

  • BCC

    0.9500

    72.24

    +1.32%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.03

    +0.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    19.25

    +1.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    13.08

    -0.08%

  • AZN

    -10.7900

    178.49

    -6.05%

'Windmill love' sees Dutch artist become mill operator
'Windmill love' sees Dutch artist become mill operator / Photo: Nick Gammon - AFP

'Windmill love' sees Dutch artist become mill operator

Dutch artist Peet Wessels might not call it an obsession, but with over 100 images of windmills in her home, it's clear she's a big fan -- her walls practically whirl with admiration.

Text size:

Now Wessels, who rose to fame by painting windmills on the mill's used canvas sails, is taking it one step further.

She is training to become a real-life miller -- someone who operates and maintains a windmill -- joining a growing number of women in what was once seen as a man's world.

It was a blustery afternoon at De Heimolen, an ancient wheat mill in Rucphen-Bosschenhoofd near the southern Dutch city of Breda.

Perched some 10 metres (about 32 feet) on one of the four wings of the mill, built in 1866, Wessels tied canvas over the wooden slats.

She then scarpered down and ran around the structure to release a brake to set the creaking blades in motion.

"You cannot have a fear of hights if you want to be a miller," Wessels told AFP, dressed in sturdy boots, jeans and a hoodie bearing the insignia of the Dutch Guild of Millers.

For almost two years now, Wessels, 59, has been following the ancient course on how to become a miller, joining some 2,000 others in the Netherlands, famous for its clogs, cheese and... windmills.

Wessels believes she is the only woman miller in the North Brabant province, a short hop from one of the country's most iconic windmill locations at the nearby Kinderdijk.

In all, there are some 200 woman millers around the Netherlands, she added, mostly based around the central city of Utrecht.

Trainee millers learn mill mechanics -- how to steer the massive blades without damaging them, safety around the rapidly moving parts and how to read the weather.

"It's a bit like being the captain of a sailing ship," said Wessels.

- 'Rather in a mill' -

Asked about woman millers making waves in a role seen for centuries as traditionally male, Wessels did not think of herself as a pioneer.

"But I'd rather be in a mill than attending a fashion show," she laughed.

A chemical engineer by profession, Wessels said she was always interested in windmills and how they worked.

After stints as an engineer in the United States and Britain, she decided to start a new career as a painter in the late 1990s.

But sales dropped and after the credit crunch in 2008, Wessels knew she had to innovate "and do something different".

One day she was cycling past a windmill when she hit upon an idea.

"I told the miller I want do something with mills and paint them, do you have something I could use?"

That's when the miller showed her the used canvas cloth used in the mill's wings -- and so an idea was born.

"It was stinky and full of insects, so I had to scrub it clean first," she said.

Her chemical engineering background came in handy, helping her to find the right way to treat the canvas to show both the painting and the cloths' natural ageing process.

"The cloth and the painting had to work together. It has to show the history of the cloth that's been on the mill sometimes for 20 years or longer," she said.

Wessels' painting of the mill also exactly matches the actual mill on which the canvas was used.

- 'Not a fanatic' -

Two of her favourites now hang in her kitchen: one work called "Dutch Skies" and another called "Dutch Landscape."

Both were painted on the canvas from the 1740 Overwaard 7 mill at Kinderdijk -- which has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage site because of its 19 iconic mills.

Wessels has painted almost all of the Netherlands' famous windmills -- including a mill called De Kat north of Amsterdam -- the world's last remaining windmill using wind power to make paint pigment.

"Almost all the millers know me. I used to ask for old canvas, but now they phone me when they have some available," Wessels laughed.

Asked if she ever dreams of windmills, she quipped: "I'm not a fanatic. But training to become a miller is perhaps a step closer!"

U.Pospisil--TPP