An Ocean Apart
By Noelle Grosse
1999

Victor and his lost love.
WDM Photo
Victor Humeniuk and his girlfriend lived an ocean apart for most of their
lives, but two carvings in their likeness now sit side by side.
Humeniuk, who lived near Fenwood, 50 km southeast of Yorkton, carved
life-sized figures of himself and a woman out of a single poplar tree in
1936, shortly after he immigrated to Canada from Krywiezy, Poland.
Humeniuk’s stepdaughter, Olga Wilk, said the female figure was carved to
resemble the girlfriend that Humeniuk left behind when he moved to Canada,
and never saw again. Humeniuk was married briefly in the 1960s, but lived
alone most of his life. He died at age 84 in 1976.
The carvings, on display at the Yorkton branch of the Western Development
Museum, have eyebrows, hair and moveable joints. Humeniuk dressed the male
figure in some of his own clothing.
The carvings were separated before Humeniuk’s death when he gave the male
form to neighbours. Bill Matichuk received the carving, and recalled how it
often startled visitors.
“We used to keep it on the porch, and people would get scared because he
looked so real,” Matichuk remarked.
He said his family decided to donate the sculpture to the Yorkton branch of
the Western Development Museum, but did not know the whereabouts of the
other figure. “We just thought it would look better in the Museum,” Matichuk
commented.
Humeniuk left the other carving with his stepdaughter, Olga Wilk, who said
she also donated it to the Western Development Museum without knowing that
one of the pair was already there.
“I didn’t know about it, but I guess we were just thinking the same thing,”
she said, “It’s good that the two are together.”
The figures are among the Western Development Museum’s most popular
artifacts. They were featured in a book about Canadian museum collections
called Significant Treasures. Ruth Bitner, WDM Collections Curator, said the
carvings were chosen because of the story they represent.
“They tell a story of separation, of moving to a new country and leaving
loved ones behind,” Bitner stated.
Fortunately, they now tell their poignant story together.
Victor and his love overlooking the Yorkton WDM
Winning the Prairie Gamble
exhibit, 2010.
WDM Photo - Randy Barwick
Museum Gold: Treasures from the Collection
This
article was originally published as part of a newspaper articles written
by Noelle Grosse in celebration of the Western Development Museum's 50th
anniversary in 1999. The articles appeared as regular features over the
course of late 1998 and 1999 in the Saskatoon Sun,Yorkton This Week
and Enterprise, and as intermittent features in the Regina
Sun. In 2001, all 65 articles were gathered into a publication -
Museum Gold: Treasures from the Collection.
Museum Gold is available in WDM Gift Shops and
online.
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