English Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

English Report Document generated on 09/28/2021 7:42 p.m. Vie des arts English Report Volume 50, Number 201, Winter 2005–2006 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/52581ac See table of contents Publisher(s) La Société La Vie des Arts ISSN 0042-5435 (print) 1923-3183 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this review (2005). Review of [English Report]. Vie des arts, 50(201), 74–79. Tous droits réservés © La Société La Vie des Arts, 2006 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ SACKVILLE, Realists, and Surrey is a prime ex­ less and strong ones at that. Along NEW BRUNSWICK ample, are often overlooked in our the same Unes are a pair of early art history. It is easy to see why as paintings by Fredericton, New many of their works appear drab FULL SPACE: Brunswick artist Molly Lamb Bobak, when compared with the easy going who is one of the few artist in Full MODERN ART FROM THE landscapes of the Group of Seven. Space, if not the only one, who is FIRESTONE COLLECTION A little ink and watercolour such still alive and active. The artists in OF CANADIAN ART as Surrey's Factory, which is in the this exhibition were the familiar 28th 0ctober-18th December 2005 exhibition, is not the kind of thing names in the Canadian art world The Owens Art Gallery many collectors of the time would when I moved to Canada in 1967 to * % 61 York Street have liked to put on their walls when teach art at the University of Alberta. k Mount Allison University they could have lovely landscapes. Now they seem to have faded from Tel. 506-364-2574 Social Realism also later lost out sight and become footnotes in the www.mta.ca/owens when it was identified with Marxism, art history books. They are better This exhibition features a selec­ Communism and Socialism, but than that and this exhibition was a tion of works from the Ottawa Art there was a period prior to the good way to look at them again and Gallery's Firestone Collection of Second World War when many of understand how modern art came Canadian Art and was put together our artists clearly identified with to the fore in Canada. Contemporary by Emily Falvey, the Ottawa gallery's these very values. The Red scares of Canadian artists owe a debt to these left behind after the life has ended. present curator who is a former the 1950s and the post war boom pioneers who deserve a hard sec­ They also interpret all powerful Mount Allison University art history changed all of that, and our artists ond look. earth forces, as registrations, tiny student. Falvey also edited the ex­ had to look elsewhere-that where Virgil Hammock fines and exagerrated striations. The cellent catalogue for the exhibition was Modernism. surface may be that of an artwork that features two fines essays: one by This exhibition has three very for the artist, but the carries allu­ Esther Trépanier, Director of the fine small paintings by Jean Paul QUÉBEC CITY sions to more universal physical Ottawa Art Gallery, and the other by Riopelle, Paul-Emile Borduas and forces. Whether in biology or geol­ Gemey Kelly, Director of the Owens Marcelle Ferron, all done between ogy, or astrophysics these forms are Art Gallery. Kelly.s essay, A Definite 1955 and 1958. In fact, all the works LUDMILA ARMATA: transitional as they are universal. Image: The Representation of the in Full Space are modest in scale LETTERS FROM THE Working on steel plates, or del­ Social in Canadian Art of the 1930's which, to my mind, is not such a bad CENTRE OF THE EARTH icately assembling miniature works and 1940's speaks to the essence of thing, as it proves that artworks to Engramme in boxes after cutting them out, Lud­ the exhibition which is the transition not have to be large to be important 501, rue de Saint-Vallier Est mila Armata integrates a sense of of Canadian art from its emphasis or good. The three works by these At the heart of matter there is time, of the density and shape of on the landscape to a focus on ur­ Automatistes clearly demonstrate a matter. At the core of the earth- time, and of the perpetual changes ban imagery. There are also works new direction for Canadian art in the there is some unseen force, an en­ that seismic movements enact, as in the exhibition that invoke the be­ 1950's. It is pure abstraction and ergy that abounds. We can only much sound as matter. The seismic ginnings of Modernism in Canadian painting for painting's sake, with no imaghine what the sources there are shifts on the surface of earth be­ art, mainly through the paintings reference to social issues. This is or could be. We cannot define, have come a digital dance, with scatalog- of the Automatistes, but that Que­ not to say that these artists were not never seen the centre of the earth. ical notations, scratchy effects,... bec-based movement occurred in interested in social issues. Their art Nevertheless the seismic shifts and vertical vortices open up and then the 1950s and outside the scope of was very much a part of the Quiet tectonic plate movements affects close. There is a repetition of Une Kelly's essay. Revolution that was to follow in our lives. However brief in intensity, in many variations. The fines are Canada, in spite of its vast French speaking Quebec, but that these phenomena can generate Uke voices that speak to us from wilderness, is an urban nation, how­ is a whole other topic and there is tsunamis, earthquakes... Ludmila some distant and inhuman, less than ever, the landscape paintings of the no room here to get into details. Armata's Letters from the Centre of conscious source. The ongoing Group of Seven were central to how Borduas and his followers are a the Earth series (2005), her etch­ change is an effect of motion, or we saw ourselves as a nation in the very important part of the history ing Poem from the Centre of the affect of energy. All this passes first three decades of the 20th cen­ of Canadian painting. Borduas Earth (2005), the Shadow & Shape through the earth and is para­ tury. Increased urbanization and the could achieve results in a small series (2005) created in boxes with phrased in Armata's art. Energy Depression were to change that vi­ painting, such as his Formes ou­ pins and fragile tiny cut-outs a la moves towards a surface and speaks sion. In this carefully curated exhi­ blier, 1958, in this exhibition, that Henri Matisse in white paper on to us, Armata's art seems to suggest. bition these changes are reflected many other Modernist painters black and vice versa, or black on The energy, eventually moves on­ through art. The large Firestone could not in wall sized works. black and white on white are like ward, and dissipates, dissolves Collection is the cornerstone of the There are other pictures in the entomological and exemplary exer­ altogether. Her art has this aspect Ottawa Art Gallery's collection and, exhibition by artists who were well cises in aesthetics. Also on view are of sensitivity for the dissolution of in fact, has a very large number of known in early second half of the the large scale Tectonica (2005) things, even of histories, and this is Group of Seven works. Falvey looked last century such as B.C. artists Jack series of etchings that can be as­ the personal and autobiographical at the less popular, but important, Shadbolt, who is represented by sembled in a variety of ways on a part of her art, all abstract even so. works in the collection for the ex­ two fine paintings Night Harbour wall. Armata's Tectonica series What a metaphor for life itself! hibition, such as the urban land­ Image, 1959, and Italian Town, emphasizes the surface of things, With this art, we can fully under­ scapes of underrated Montreal artist 1961. These paintings are more ab­ and the traces that are felt or even stand how time can be a metaphor Philip Surrey. Many of these Surrey stractions than the non-objective left by energy, even the way life's for life, (particularly as it affects the works are Montreal street scenes of works of the Automatistes, but they traces are ultimately ephemeral and physics of the world we are in). working class neighborhoods. Social are Modernist paintings none the exist at a moment in time, orcan be 74 VIE DES ARTS N°201 ENGLISH Ludmila Armata has created a Désilets are all represented with spectrum of artists such as Robert body of work that not only refer­ their various takes on the city and Roussil, Armand Vaillancourt, and ences the unseen, the invisible by it's discontents, as well as it's star­ Jean-Paul Mousseau, among others. drawing sometimes fluid, other- tling, harsh beauty and disorienting Largely self taught, Vittorio defies times nervous, very physical mo­ vision. With largely new contribu­ categories, yet helped to pioneer a tions in a push and pull tug of war tions, three of the six have contri­ certain bold pictorial and symbolic battle with the surfaces and density buted works in medium that is now style.
Recommended publications
  • 26727 Consignor Auction Catalogue Template
    Auction of Important Canadian & International Art September 24, 2020 AUCTION OF IMPORTANT CANADIAN & INTERNATIONAL ART LIVE AUCTION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24TH AT 7:00 PM ROYAL ONTARIO MUSEUM 100 Queen’s Park (Queen’s Park at Bloor Street) Toronto, Ontario ON VIEW Please note: Viewings will be by appointment. Please contact our team or visit our website to arrange a viewing. COWLEY ABBOTT GALLERY 326 Dundas Street West, Toronto, Ontario JULY 8TH - SEPTEMBER 4TH Monday to Friday: 9:00 am to 5:00 pm SEPTEMBER 8TH - 24TH Monday to Friday: 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Saturdays: 11:00 am to 5:00 pm Sunday, September 20th: 11:00 am to 5:00 pm 326 Dundas Street West (across the street from the Art Gallery of Ontario) Toronto, Ontario M5T 1G5 416-479-9703 | 1-866-931-8415 (toll free) | [email protected] 2 COWLEY ABBOTT | September Auction 2020 Cowley Abbott Fine Art was founded as Consignor Canadian Fine Art in August 2013 as an innovative partnership within the Canadian Art industry between Rob Cowley, Lydia Abbott and Ryan Mayberry. In response to the changing landscape of the Canadian art market and art collecting practices, the frm acts to bridge the services of a retail gallery and auction business, specializing in consultation, valuation and professional presentation of Canadian art. Cowley Abbott has rapidly grown to be a leader in today’s competitive Canadian auction industry, holding semi-annual live auctions, as well as monthly online Canadian and International art auctions. Our frm also ofers services for private sales, charity auctions and formal appraisal services, including insurance, probate and donation.
    [Show full text]
  • The National Gallery of Canada: a Hundred Years of Exhibitions: List and Index
    Document generated on 09/28/2021 7:08 p.m. RACAR : Revue d'art canadienne Canadian Art Review The National Gallery of Canada: A Hundred Years of Exhibitions List and Index Garry Mainprize Volume 11, Number 1-2, 1984 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1074332ar DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1074332ar See table of contents Publisher(s) UAAC-AAUC (University Art Association of Canada | Association d'art des universités du Canada) ISSN 0315-9906 (print) 1918-4778 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Mainprize, G. (1984). The National Gallery of Canada: A Hundred Years of Exhibitions: List and Index. RACAR : Revue d'art canadienne / Canadian Art Review, 11(1-2), 3–78. https://doi.org/10.7202/1074332ar Tous droits réservés © UAAC-AAUC (University Art Association of Canada | This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit Association d'art des universités du Canada), 1984 (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ The National Gallery of Canada: A Hundred Years of Exhibitions — List and Index — GARRY MAINPRIZE Ottawa The National Gallerv of Canada can date its February 1916, the Gallery was forced to vacate foundation to the opening of the first exhibition of the muséum to make room for the parliamentary the Canadian Academy of Arts at the Clarendon legislators.
    [Show full text]
  • Philip Surrey, Artist: a Newsletter for Collectors the Vancouver Years October 1929— October1936
    T.F. RIGELHOF, EDITOR Page | 0 Philip Surrey, Artist: A Newsletter for Collectors The Vancouver Years October 1929— October1936 November 2015 Issue No.1 Issue No.1 PHILIP SURREY, ARTIST: A NEWSLETTER Page | 1 FOR COLLECTORS T.F. Rigelhof, Editor [email protected] Issue No.1 November 2015 The materials in this document are for the private use of its recipients and not for further publication without the explicit consent of the editor. Any illustration of a Surrey artwork is a low resolution compression of a photograph of the work and is included only to provide guidance and avoid confusion between works of similar subject matter and/or title and fall and is included under the provisions of fair use. A ssistance in locating an exact image in available on- line from gallery and museum sites except in the case of a recent rediscovery. T.F.R. CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE 1. The Vancouver Years: October 1929—October 1936 2. Rediscovery: Portrait of Phyllis Planta (1933) 3. Epilogue & List of B.C. Paintings 1.THE VANCOUVER YEARS: OCTOBER 1929— OCTOBER 1936 A Note on Sources: If all that you know about Philip Surrey’s years in Vancouver comes from the first ten or so minutes of Charles Hill’s interview of September 14, 1973 (posted at the National Gallery’s Canadian Painting in the 30s CYBERMUSE) then you know less than you need to know to know what it is that you don’t know. There are four other sources in the public domain: (1) the Vancouver section (pp34—53) of the 237 page untitled typescript of the 1st person narrative his wife Margaret claimed she wrote and that I refer to as Margaret’s Version (2) the 4th and 5th unnumbered pages of notes Surrey typed on April 26, 1947 (3) ©2015 T.F.
    [Show full text]
  • Ma Bell Taken· to Task It Will Be Mid-Summer Before Concordia Considerable.Media Attention
    Concordia University-Montreal, Quebec Rate hikes attacked Ma Bell taken· to task It will be mid-summer before Concordia considerable.media attention. Although the knows whether its precedent-setting phone company hasn't commented on these intervention last month against Bell requests, Laprade reports that Bell's initial Canada's proposed rate hike has any reaction to the suggestion that Concordia impact. , be used for future field trials of new Thaf's when the Canadian Radio­ equipment has been favourable. This, reads television and Telecommunications 'the brief, might be one way of upgrading Commission (CRTC) is expected to rule on the university's phone system in the long the telephone company's request; a request run. that, if granted, would increase telephone In defending its position, the university costs at the univerisity by some 13 per cent pointed out that: or well over $100,000. • while Bell is seeking approval to charge In its brief to the CRTC, presented May more for its services, Concordia student 19 by Assistant Vice:Rector (Relations and fees are frozen by government decree; Audit) Andre Laprade, the university • Bell claims to be seeking just treatment argued that its position as a non-profit of its employees, but Concordia would organization should entitle it to some relief hardly be doing likewise by· earmarking from the financial hardship that will be part of the 70 per cent of its operating experienced should it be forced to face yet budget that is normally devoted to salaries another increase. to help cover increased telephone costs; There's something about Sergio Leone westerns that sets them apart from all other films Last year's rate hike, Laprade noted, • while Bell insists-that it must maintain of the genre.
    [Show full text]
  • Le Discours Muséal À Travers L'exposition Des Collections De
    Université de Montréal Le discours muséal à travers l’exposition des collections de quatre musées d’art: Montréal, Québec, Joliette et Sherbrooke par Nathalie Houle Département d’histoire de l’art et d’études cinématographiques Faculté des arts et des sciences Mémoire présenté à la Faculté des études supérieures en vue de l’obtention du grade de Maîtrise ès arts (M.A.) en histoire de l’art août 2013 © Nathalie Houle , 2013 Université de Montréal Faculté des études supérieures Ce mémoire intitulé : Le discours muséal à travers l’exposition des collections de quatre musées d’art : Montréal, Québec, Joliette et Sherbrooke Présenté par : Nathalie Houle A été évalué par un jury composé des personnes suivantes : Nicole Dubreuil Président-rapporteur Christine Bernier Directrice de recherche Johanne Lamoureux Membre du jury RÉSUMÉ Les musées d’art sont des lieux privilégiés pour contempler les productions artistiques du passé et d’aujourd’hui. En vertu de leur mandat, ceux-ci ont la tâche difficile de concilier leurs fonctions de délectation et d’éducation du public. Certains favorisent une approche plutôt que l’autre, mais tous portent un regard subjectif sur ce qu’ils exposent. Même si les œuvres semblent être disposées naturellement dans les salles, tout ce qui relève de la conception et de la réalisation des expositions est savamment construit et résulte d’un parti-pris de la part du musée. En fonction de ses choix, c’est-à-dire de ce qu’elle présente ou non et comment elle le fait, l’institution muséale participe à la définition de ce qu’est l’art et influence la signification des œuvres.
    [Show full text]
  • In Partial Fulfillnent of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History
    BUSINESS, ART AND LABOUR: BRIGDEN'S AND THE GROWTH OF THE CANADIAN GRAPHIC ARTS INDUSTRY 1870_1950 By Angela E. Davis A Thesis presented to the University of Manitoba in partial fulfillnent of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of PhiLosophy in History The University of Manitoba t{innipeg, Manitoba September 1986 ABSTRACT The thesis presented in this dissertation concerns the inter-reLationship between business, art and labour in Canada during the years 1870 to 1950. It will suggest that the foundations of "Canadian Art" and a Canadian popular culture rest not only within the European traditions of "fine" art, but also in the work of those artists who practiced in the commercial environment of engraving, or graphic arts, houses. Indeed most artists, for the period under discussion, worked as both "commercial" and "fine" artists. In order to substantiate this argument, a history of the development of the Canadian graphic arts industry will be traced, using the firm of Brigden's Limited as a case study. Graphic arts firns such as Brigden's demonstrate the unique aspects of an industry which included among its workforce artÍsts as wel.l as skilled technicians. Not only did thjs reguire a management capable of recognizing artistic creativity and practical knowledge, but it al.so necessitated an organization capable of adapting to econonic, social and technoj.ogical change. It was from out of this structure that the product of the industry, the reproduced visual image, made its considerabLe contribution to the development of a Canadian
    [Show full text]
  • La Collection De Peinture Canadienne De La CIL / New Patrons of Art the CIL Collection of Canadian Painting
    Document generated on 09/29/2021 1:34 p.m. Vie des arts Le nouveau mécénat: La collection de peinture canadienne de la CIL New Patrons of Art the CIL Collection of Canadian Painting Paul Dumas Volume 21, Number 84, Fall 1976 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/54976ac See table of contents Publisher(s) La Société La Vie des Arts ISSN 0042-5435 (print) 1923-3183 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Dumas, P. (1976). Le nouveau mécénat: La collection de peinture canadienne de la CIL / New Patrons of Art the CIL Collection of Canadian Painting. Vie des arts, 21(84), 38–92. Tous droits réservés © La Société La Vie des Arts, 1976 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ 38 EXISTENCE DE LA COULEUR Paul Dumas Le nouveau mécénat: La collection de peinture canadienne de la CIL . EXISTENCE DE LA COULEUR 39 Les éléments les plus dynamiques du monde des affaires sont conscients des besoins sociaux et culturels — c'est-à-dire de la qualité de la vie — des populations qui les entourent, et cela consti­ tue, pour notre pays, un potentiel énorme. (Charles Lussier, Conférence prononcée à Toron­ to, le 7 mai 1976, devant l'Institut de Recherche en Dons et en Affaires Publiques.) 1.
    [Show full text]
  • And Others TITLE in Search of Canadian- Materials
    DOCUAENT EBSUBB ED 126 351 CB 007 4890 AUTHOV Phillips, Donna; Coop.; And Others TITLE In Search of Canadian- Materials. INSTITUTION Hanitoba Dept. of Education, Hinnipeg. PUB DATE Apr 76 NOTE 213p. EDRS PRICE OF -$0.83 BC-$11.37 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Annotated 'Bibliographies; Audiovisual Aids; Books; *Elementary Secondary Education; *Foreign Countries; *Library Haterial Selection; Periodicals;Reference Materials; Resource Haterials; *SchoolLibraries tZENTIFIERS *Canada; '}Manitoba ABSTRACT The annotated bibliography, commissioned by the Canadian Studies Project. Committee, isa basic list of available Canadian materials suitable for school libraries.It consists of over 1,000 entries withan emphasis on materials ,relevant to Manitoba.A broad range of topics is covered: business education,e consumer eduegation, fine arts, guidance, familylife and health, hope economics, language and literature (biography,drama, novels, short stories, folktales, language arts, miscellaneous,picture books and picture story books, and poetry), literarycriticism, mathematics, physical education, social studies (geography,history, native studies, and 4sobitical studies), and science(general, physical, and natural). The majority of items listedare library or trade books but some text book series, periodicals, and reference materialshave been included. All types of audiovisual materialsare included except 16mb films and videotapes. For each entry typicalbibliographical data, grade level, and a brief description,are included. A title index is appended. (BP) ********************************************************************** DocAtheAts acquired by ERIC includemany informal unpublished * materials not available `from othersources. ERIC cakes every effort * * to obtain the best copy available. Nevertheless,items of marginal * * reproducibility are often encountered and thisaffects the quality * * of the picrofiche and hardcopy reproductionsERIC makes available * * via the ERIC Docutent Reproduction Service (EbRS).EDRS is not * * responsible for the quality of the originaldocument.
    [Show full text]
  • Philip Surrey, Artist
    1. Reflections on Selected Portraits Portrait of My Mother (1931) 3 Self-Portrait (1940) 8 Taverne (with John Lyman) (1942) 13 Soda Bar (with Gabrielle Roy) (c. 1947—1950) 23 Philip & Margaret, Lake Orford (1944) 38 The Letter (Margaret Surrey) (1944) 41 1 ©T.F. Rigelhof 2019 Page 1 Some of my Favourite Portraits: Reflections 2 These observations & reflections presenting my two decades of research and expressing my sometimes contentious point of view are solely for the private use and personal enjoyment of readers and are not for further publication without my explicit consent. All illustrations of Surrey artworks are low resolution compressions of photographs of the works... Locating a more exact photograph is generally possible on-line except sometimes in the case of a recent rediscovery. They are posted with the permission of Nicholas Simpson on behalf of the Estate of Philip Surrey. Reproduction of and all works protected by Canadian and international copyright laws and are ©Nicholas Simpson. Rights are administered by SODRAC. T.F.R. ©T.F. Rigelhof 2019 Page 2 Philip Surrey, Portrait of My Mother (1931) 3 22 x 18 oil on canvas ©Nicholas Simpson Philip Surrey’s Portrait of My Mother (1931) was the first of his oil paintings exhibited in public: initially at the Seventh Annual Exhibition of Canadian Art at the National Gallery in Ottawa, 22 January 1932 to 23 February 1932 and then at the newly opened Vancouver Art Gallery’s inaugural All- Canadian Exhibition of May—July 1932. Despite being the first shown, it is one of the artist’s least known paintings, archived in his private collection until his death and in his estate until 2017.
    [Show full text]
  • Canada on Canvas – List of Works Owners of All the Works Are Willing to Lend
    Canada on Canvas – List of Works Owners of all the works are willing to lend. Values provided on request for insurance purposes. People (11 works) 1 Unidentified Quebec Artist Portrait of a Lady, c. 1840–c. 1850 Oil on canvas framed 83 x 63 cm The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Gift of Ken MacDonald , 2006-19 2 Cornelius David Krieghoff Canadian (born in the Netherlands), 1815–1972 Caughnawaga Indians at Camp, c. 1855 Oil on canvas framed 43.18 x 66.04 cm On loan to the Winnipeg Art Gallery from a private collection , 1535.008 3 Frederick Verner Canadian, 1836–1928 Portrage Mary Lake, Muskoka, 1873 Oil on board framed 45.72 x 30.48 cm On long-term loan to the Winnipeg Art Gallery from a private collection , 1536.042 4 Emily Coonan Canadian, 1885–1971 The Fairy Tale, c. 1911 Oil on wood panel framed 23.4 x 24.7 cm The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Gift of Mr. Peter Dobush , G-65-65 5 Frederick Horsman Varley Canadian (born in England), 1881–1969 J.W.G. Jock Macdonald, 1930 Oil on canvas framed 50.7 x 45.9 cm Collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Acquired with funds from The Winnipeg Foundation and an anonymous donor , G-72-8 6 E. Prudence Heward Canadian, 1896–1947 Farmer’s Daughter, c. 1938 Oil on canvas framed, 66.6 x 66.5 cm The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Gift of the Estate of Prudence Heward , G-51-170 7 Ozias Leduc Canadian, 1864–1955 Study for the Portrait of Gertrude Leduc, 1939 Oil on board framed 24.0 x 17.0 cm The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Gift from the estate of Gertrude Leduc, 2003-109 8 Jack Weldon Humphrey Canadian, 1901–1967 Little Girl With Yellow Headdress, c.
    [Show full text]
  • John Vanderpant and the Cultural Life of Vancouver, 19 20-1939
    John Vanderpant and the Cultural Life of Vancouver, 19 20-1939 SHERYL SALLOUM The Canadian photographer John Vanderpant (1884-1939) achieved world-wide recognition for his black and white images and was "a major influence on Canadian photography in the 1920s and 1930s."1 He was also a major influence on the cultural development of the Vancouver area in those years. Vanderpant is an example of the patron who, according to Maria Tippett, helped to make Canadian culture "richly-textured, diver­ sified, and spontaneous" in the period between the two world wars.2 His endeavours to encourage the arts were extraordinary; his contributions to the cultural milieu of the West Coast are as unique and intriguing as his photography. Vanderpant emigrated from Holland in 1911, but he did not become a permanent Canadian resident until 1913. At that time he settled in the beautifully rugged region of southern Alberta. Attracted by its resource- rich economy and scenic expanses, Vanderpant felt that the area offered viable employment possibilities and creative freedom. These were espe­ cially important to the young man as he was beginning a career as a portrait photographer, and he wanted to escape restricting European traditions.3 To Vanderpant's dismay, he found that the area was artistically isolated; he yearned for a more vibrant cultural environment. It is not surprising, therefore, that he began importing American and European publications and musical recordings in order to keep himself attuned to new and avant- garde movements. Over the years he would disseminate that information, and the ways in which he would do so were distinctive.
    [Show full text]
  • In Between the Wars
    Interfaces of the Portrait: Liminality and Dialogism in Canadian Women's Portraiture Between the Wars by Marielle Aylen, B.F.A. A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Canadian Art History Carleton University OTTAWA, Ontario April First c 1996, Marielle Aylen National Library Bibliothèque nationale du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisitions et Bibliographie SeMces services bibliographiques 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A ON4 OttawaON K1AON4 Canada Canâda The author has granted a non- L'auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive licence allowing the exclusive permettant à la National Library of Canada to Bibliothèque nationale du Canada de reproduce, loan, distribute or sell reproduire, prêter, distribuer ou copies of this thesis in microform, vendre des copies de cette thèse sous paper or electronic formats. la forme de microfiche/nlm, de reproduction sur papier ou sur format électronique. The author retains ownership of the L'auteur conserve la propriété du copyright in this thesis. Neither the droit d'auteur qui protège cette thèse. thesis nor substantial extracts fiom it Ni la thèse ni des extraits substantiels may be printed or otherwise de celle-ci ne doivent être imprimés reproduced without the author's ou autrement reproduits sans son permission. autorisation. iii ABSTRACT This thesis examines the production of portraiture by Canadian women artists during the interwar period. Through an interrogation of the aperture which opened up for portraiture at this time, the thesis argues for a transitional period in Canadian art in which a shift toward social consciousness renewed interest in the human figure.
    [Show full text]