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Joy Turner Luke

1925 - 2023

Joy Turner Luke obituary, 1925-2023, Rappahannock, VA

Joy Luke Obituary

Joy Luke died peacefully in her sleep on June 12, 2023, one month shy of her 98th birthday. She was born in New York City on July 17, 1925. On her birthday, her parents agreed that she was "a pure joy", and thus Joy Beth Turner was named, and her mother said she was a joy throughout her life. Joy's parents, Leslie Holland Turner, and Bethel Burson Turner were native Texans and had moved to New York City to pursue his career as a successful magazine illustrator. As the great depression took hold, jobs for illustrators became scarce, so when Joy was 4 years old, her family, now including her younger sister Ann, left New York City and spent several years homesteading on the edge of the Purgatoire River in Colorado or living with her grandparents in Texas. For Joy these were formative years, as they learned to ride horses, and drive cattle. They learned Texas folk wisdom, such as placing a rope around your bedroll at night to keep snakes away. On school days in the small town of Silverton, TX, they would walk, ride in a buckboard, or on a horse, the 2 miles to school. For the rest of her life, Joy fondly remembered these times, regaling family and friends with tales from those western years. When asked where she was from, Joy would proudly say "Texas!" By 1938, her father, having become the cartoonist for the comic strip "Captain Easy," had moved the family to Orlando, Florida. During these years Joy developed an interest in painting. As a high school junior Joy was selected to attend Rollins College to complete her senior year and attended SMU on an art scholarship. In 1943, while attending a tea dance in Orlando, she met the engineering officer for the 422nd Night Fighter Squadron, Lt. Ernest 'Pete' Luke, whose squadron was training there. They fell in love, married, and began a 68-year love story. Two weeks after they married, Pete's Squadron was sent to the European Theater, and they did not see each other for two years. While raising two sons she found time to continue art classes, studying at the American University in Washington D.C. She was one of the all-women founders of the Studio Gallery, where her work was exhibited and sold for years. She was also active in The Torpedo Factory art space, in Alexandria, VA. In 1960 Joy and Pete bought an abandoned farmhouse built in 1915, with no utilities, located off Route 231 near Sperryville, Virginia. For 12 years the family spent weekends, holidays, and vacations modernizing the house, and built her a studio, Studio231. Pete retired as a Colonel from the Air Force in 1972, but Joy's career was just getting started. It was at Studio231 where Joy's interest would change from painting with color, to the science of color, about which she was mainly self-taught. She began to teach classes about how the human eye sees and the brain perceives color, and how these can be manipulated. Her research, classes, articles, and lectures would lead her to work as a color consultant to various galleries, museums, and other entities, including the Cartography Division of the CIA. She also lectured at several colleges, including Clemson University and the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. She became the Artists Equity Association's representative on the National Bureau of Standards, subcommittee on Artists' Paints, and chairman of the Inter-Society Color Council (ISCC) subcommittee on Artist Materials. In 1994 she authored The New Munsell Student Color Set. However, her most important contribution to both the arts, and the sciences, was between 1977 and 1990, as the subcommittee chairperson for the D-1 57 committee at the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM). Her committee would create a series of consensus standards focusing on the safety and lightfastness of art materials. It was through her subcommittee that manufacturers of art materials connected with customers, and with State and Federal politicians, who all wanted national standards for testing the safety and quality of art materials. Her efforts were instrumental in the passage of the Federal 'Hazardous Substance Act' of 1988, providing professional artists, hobbyists, teachers, and parents with labels on products tested for toxicity, and lightfastness. These standards have now been adopted worldwide. For her work in color in both the arts, and the sciences, Joy received the Gardner Award, for leading the D-1 57's 26 subcommittees, and in 1987 was made a Fellow of the ASTM, and given their Award of Merit. In June of 2001 Joy received a U. S. patent: "Method for generating numerous harmonious color palettes from two colors." In 2013 Joy received the God love award, the most prestigious award bestowed by the Inter-Society Color Council, for her long-term contributions in the field of color. In 2018, at the Munsell Centennial Color Symposium in Boston, at the age of 93, Joy received a lifetime award: The Munsell Centennial Award in Art for her lifetime work in advancing both art, and the science of color. For all her professional accomplishments, Joy always had time to enjoy her family. Their mountain home and Studio231 became a mecca for her children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, extended family, friends, and students. She was always ready for a horseback ride, a hike in the woods, interesting conversation peppered with funny quips, or in giving a lesson on color theory using a multiple slide-projector demonstration that always left viewers amazed, and questioning what they thought they knew about color. Joy was predeceased by her husband, parents, and sister Ann Turner Cook. Her younger sister Toby Tuner, of Texas, survives her. She was a loving daughter, wife, and mother, as well as an inspiration to her family and friends. Joy will always be remembered with love and admiration, and deeply missed by her sons and their spouses: Peter and Sharon Luke of Sperryville, Virginia, and Kim and Betty Luke of Potomac, Maryland, as well as by her four grandchildren, Stephen, Michelle, Christina, and Benjamin, and 6 great-grandchildren. An online guest book and tribute wall are available at www.foundandsons.com. Found and Sons Funeral Chapel of Culpeper is serving the family.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by InsideNoVa on Jun. 27, 2023.

Memories and Condolences
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2 Entries

K Gonzales

December 17, 2023

Go with God and draw the angels. Prayers for your family.

Rhonda Farfan

December 16, 2023

I just found out about the passing of Joy Turner Luke. She was a friend and mentor to me. We attended many ASTM meetings together and I so enjoyed her wonderfully diplomatic yet forceful approach to manufacturers of art materials. She always had all her ducks in a row with facts and research to back up her points regarding the quality of art materials. She was definitely a force to be reckoned with. I will always hold my memories of Joy to be a dear and special period of my life. May you rest in peace. There will never be another like you!

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