One-Tank Trip
for Nov. 9/19
(c) By Jim Fox
It will be the
100th anniversary May 7 when a group of artists calling themselves the Group of
Seven mounted their first formal exhibition at the Art Gallery of Toronto (now
the Art Gallery of Ontario).
Over a three-week
run about 2,000 visitors viewed more than 120 paintings of which only
six were sold.
Franklin Carmichael’s
autumnal symphony calked October Gold will be part of the Group of Seven
exhibition. Photos from the McMichael Canadian Art Collection. |
A.Y. Jackson wrote
home that the exhibition was “attracting quite a lot of attention even if it is
not understood.”
They wouldn’t
remain little-understood for long even though they had to return to their day jobs.
In commemoration,
the McMichael Canadian Art Collection (10365 Islington Ave.) in Kleinburg will
mount a landmark exhibition of the group’s finest pieces from its permanent
collection entitled “A Like Vision:” The Group of Seven at 100.
“The collection “remains
the spiritual home” to the group and is a destination for Canadians who cherish
the artistic legacy of the country, said publicist Sam Cheung.
It grew out of the
personal devotion of Robert and Signe McMichael, he added.
Artist Lawren S.
Harris created his painting Montreal River in 1920. |
Opening on Jan. 25
and running through December, the exhibition of more than 280 works will span
five galleries and include masterpieces by each member: Jackson, Franklin
Carmichael, Lawren Harris, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J.E.H. MacDonald and
Frederick Varley.
Today the group –
later joined byA.J. Casson, Edwin Holgate and L.L. FitzGerald, and their
contemporaries Tom Thomson, David Milne and Emily Carr – are recognized as the originators
of a distinctly Canadian style of art.
A.Y. Jackson’s painting First Snow, Algoma will be shown at McMichael. |
“The Group of Seven
not only translated what they saw into a vivid visual language of their own,
but through that language they taught us to appreciate the natural beauty of
Canada in all its vast scale and variety,” said Ian A.C. Dejardin, McMichael
executive director.
On exhibit will be Jackson’s
haunting First Snow, Algoma; Carmichael’s autumnal symphony October Gold; and Harris’
magisterial Mount Robson.
Alongside will be
lesser-known pieces including humorous and impressionistic sketches by Lismer
and Harris’s unassuming Montreal River, the first work acquired by the McMichaels
in 1955.
Coinciding from June
27 is “Uninvited: Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Moment.”
It will gather more
than 200 pieces of art by a generation of women painters, photographers,
sculptors, architects and filmmakers and works by their Indigenous and
immigrant female contemporaries.
Early Morning, Sphinx Mountain, F.H. Varley
|
There will be art
of the Beaver Hall Group of painters from Montreal, among them Anne Savage and
Lilias Torrance Newton.
They will be shown
alongside the paintings by Carr from British Columbia and sculptures by Toronto
artists Elizabeth Wyn Wood, Frances Loring and Florence Wyle.
“We are delighted
to shine the spotlight at long last on this overlooked cohort of creative
Canadians” said Sarah Milroy, McMichael chief curator.
It will be
accompanied by a catalogue of some 30 essays by Canadian writers, artists and
art historians. mcmichael.com; 1-888-213-1121
All special exhibitions are included in the price of
admission at the McMichael.
That means you can check out all the shows for one price as
follows:
Members
|
Free
|
Adults
|
$18
|
Students and Seniors
|
$15
|
Children under 5
|
Free
|
Family – 1 or 2 adults and up to 4 children, 18 and younger
|
$36
|
Tuesday Pricing
|
Adults $15, Students and Seniors $12, Family $30
|
Parking
|
$7 (Free for Members)
|
Prolific Canadian art
Some of the “best
of Canadian art” is at the Woodstock Art Gallery (449 Dundas St.).
For the fall
exhibition “the entire gallery has been refreshed from top to bottom,” said
Mary Reid, director/curator.
This life-size sculpture Work Horse of a Clydesdale is by John McEwen at the Woodstock gallery. |
It shows “extraordinary
work” by artists with an international reputation alongside those from our
community, she added.
- Walk On, sculptures
by John McEwen trace nearly five decades.
- Dancing on the
Grave, explores the genre of abstraction by Dil Hildebrand and Patrick Thibert.
Evolutionary art by ErikFlock, called CommunionMan (left) and CommunionWoman (right), is shown in Woodstock. |
- Evolutionary art
by ErikFlock of Woodstock created through digital algorithms.
- The Art of
Self-Supervision, studying the link between self-reflection and self-care by Dr.
Laurie Ponsford-Hill using self-portraits as a self-reflective tool for art
therapists. cityofwoodstock.ca/en/live-and-play/woodstock-art-gallery.aspx;
(519) 539-6761 ext. 2801.
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Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
For more One-Tank Trips: http://1tanktrips.blogspot.ca
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