Showing posts with label Group of Seven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Group of Seven. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 November 2018

Late artist no longer obscure and forgotten

New Book about Peter Clapham Sheppard is launched in Toronto - Facebook postings


Collector Louis Gagilardi
By Stephen Weir 
Canadian curator and art author Tom Smart has written the long overdue first book about the late Toronto artist Sheppard. Peter Clapham Sheppard: His Life and Work, launched Friday, fittingly at Toronto's Arts & Letters Club on Elm Street.

Tom Smart at podium
Pictured Tom talks about Sheppard’s ability to arrest moments in the built world! The Firefly book is available in bookstore and on-line (I do know that Ben McNally's on Bay Street has copies).
Artist would have faded into obscurity if it wasn't for Woodbridge retired teacher and avid Sheppard collector, Louis Gagliardi (pictured at launch)
As well the Weekend Globe and Mail is always a good read but his weekend's paper is worth picking up for a major feature by Gregory Humenick about the undiscovered Peter Clapham Sheppard. Group of Seven contemporary died unknown and broke. 
Elizabeth Street by Sheppard. Painting was used in Globe story

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Canada's best landscape art, Holly Cole, Marci Ien and award winning chef all part of Moonlight Gala at the McMichael Gallery

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Holly Cole To Headline McMichael Gallery's Moonlight Gala June 8th


Holly Cole to appear at the Moonlight Gala


May 13, 2013 Kleinburg, ON – The McMichael Canadian Art Collection will host the second annual Moonlight Gala, a memorable evening of gourmet cuisine, curated libations, and dancing under the stars on Saturday, June 8, 2013. Entertainment will be headlined by internationally acclaimed jazz chanteuse Holly Cole, singing fan favourites and some new songs from her latest album, NIGHT, on an open air stage specially created on the grounds of the McMichael for the event.
A self-professed night owl, Cole is anticipating a magical evening of art and festivity: “The McMichael and the Group of Seven represented there have been an inspiration to me and so many other Canadians for years. I'm thrilled to be able to offer my voice for this wonderful event and I look forward to an inspired evening under the stars and moon.”
Marci Ien, co-host of CTV’s national morning show, Canada AM, will act as the evening’s emcee. Along with dining and dancing, guests will have a chance to bid on outstanding original artwork, generously donated by leading contemporary artists. The Gala Silent Auction features works by Charles Pachter, whose pop images are icons of Canadian art, and by internationally renowned photographer, Yuri Dojc, among others.
Chef Jamie Kennedy, known for his innovative and sustainable approach to Canadian cuisine will provide Gala-goers with a unique gastronomic experience. Award-winning Toronto landmark, Via Allegro Ristorante, holder of the world’s largest scotch collection, will also be on hand with an array of wine and spirits, including a scotch bar and martini bar.
"On June 8th, the McMichael will shine with all its natural beauty and magnificent art, as we transform the gallery and the grounds to celebrate the Moonlight Gala,” said Tina Tehranchian, McMichael Trustee and Event Chair of the fundraiser. “This will be an enchanted evening and a chance to fall in love with the McMichael all over again, while showing your support for Canadian art and culture."
Proceeds from the event will be used to create a lasting impact on Canadian art and culture by supporting excellence in educational programming and inspiring exhibitions at the McMichael.

EVENT DETAILS:

What: McMichael Moonlight Gala 2013
When: Saturday, June 8, 2013, 7:30 p.m. – midnight
Where: McMichael Canadian Art Collection, 10365 Islington Avenue, Kleinburg
Attire: Elegant chic
Tickets may be purchased online at mcmichaelmoonlightgala2013.eventbrite.ca or by calling 905.893.1121 ext. 2207
Single tickets, $350
Group Packages (10 tickets), $3,000

About the McMichael Canadian Art Collection

The McMichael Canadian Art Collection is an agency of the Government of Ontario and acknowledges the support of the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport. It is the foremost venue in the country showcasing the Group of Seven and their contemporaries. In addition to touring exhibitions, its permanent collection consists of almost 6,000 artworks by Canadian artists, including paintings by the Group of Seven and their contemporaries, as well as First Nations, Métis and Inuit artists. The gallery is located on 100 acres of northern landscape and hiking trails at 10365 Islington Avenue, Kleinburg, north of Major Mackenzie Drive in the City of Vaughan.

For more information: www.mcmichael.com.
For more information on the Gala: www.mcmichael.com/moonlightgala

Moonlight Gala Media Contact

Stephen Weir
416.489.5868 or 416.801.3101
stephen@stephenweir.com

McMichael Canadian Art Collection Media Contact
Wendy Campbell
Media Relations and Online Presence Manager
905.893.1121 ext. 2201
wcampbell@mcmichael.com

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Postive PR for dearily departed Master Painters

 Euro Interest In Group of Seven Spur Canadians To Leave Love Letters To Famed Dead Artists In Kleinburg Cemetery

Lawren and Bess Harris headstone. Flowers and note from a fan!
From a Huffington Post Blog by Stephen Weir:
 http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/stephen-weir/group-of-seven-graveyard_b_2208610.html

There are signs that the Group of Seven is finally hip with the Canadian people, even those who don't go to art galleries.
I was out at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection with a video crew last week. The McMichael has a hot show called Painting In Canada: Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. It is a show that blew off the doors at galleries in the UK and Europe over the past year. It has the best Group paintings from private collectors, the National Gallery in Ottawa, the Art Gallery of Ontario and the McMichael. This is the final (and only Canadian) stop for the touring show.
The show is experiencing record attendance in the public gallery located in Kleinburg, Ontario  - even though many of the paintings have hung in the log cabin gallery for decades.  The art-gallery-going public is rediscovering what has been in front of them all the time.  It took a London, England art gallery, the Dulwich,  and its curator Ian Desjardin, to bring the Group and Tom Thomson across the pond for an almost year-long tour.  This blockbuster exhibition has managed to rekindle interest in early 20th century Canadian landscape paintings.
At the end of last week's gallery taping I took the TV crew to see the Group of Seven cemetery. It is a quiet thoughtful park that is not often seen by visitors even though you have to drive past it to get into the gallery's parking lot. But, now with visitors wanting to see everything Group related, people are taking the time to stroll out onto the wooded grounds and see the graves. Some have attempted to interact with the dead.
We got there and I found that someone had taken the time to write fan letters to the long dead artists and placed them in front of their rough-rock headstones (the stones were cut from the Canadian Shield when the Trans Canada highway was being blasted through Northern Ontario). Bouquets of wild flowers and even a small stuffed bear pin have been left as well.
Frederick Varley's gravestone.
 The graveyard, by government statute,  is only for the artists who were in the Group of Seven, their wives and for gallery founders Robert and Signe McMichael. Tom Thomson is not there; his death predated the formation of the Group (he died in 1917 and is twice buried elsewhere).
In all there were 10 members of the Group of Seven. All but one of the artists were married. Lawren Harris was married twice. Of the ten artists who were members of the Group of Seven, six – Arthur Lismer http://www.stephenweir.com/gallery1/index.php/lismer-note-and-flowers, Frederick Varley http://www.stephenweir.com/gallery1/index.php/fred-varley-and-letter-798534596, Lawren Harris http://www.stephenweir.com/gallery1/index.php/IMG_0157, Frank Johnston, A.J. Casson and A.Y. Jackson – are buried in a small cemetery on the McMichael grounds, along with  Robert and Signe. Esther Lismer, Florence Johnston and Margaret Casson are buried there with their husbands. Harris is buried with his second wife Bess. Jackson never married and Varley's wife is buried elsewhere. I only attended two of the funerals (I am not that old!).
In fact I have been at the McMike on a part-time basis, on and off for the past 15-years.  I have spent hours over the years sitting in the cemetery - best place for cell phone reception.  I have never seen flowers, badges or letters left at the grave sites before. I was really curious, but no I didn't open the envelopes.  I do know that so far the artists have not responded to their first mail call since their burials back in the 20th century.

More information:  Last month my associate, art videographer George Socka interviewed Dulwich curator, Ian Desjardin and asked him why the Group of Seven has suddenly been embraced by art lovers in England, Europe and yes back here in Canada. This video, unique to Huffington Post is at:http://youtu.be/F-uCu98wOik
McMaster University professor James King just released a long overdue biography about Group of Seven artist Lawren Harris.  Socka has also filed a YouTube video story about James King lecturing about Lawren Harris and Tom Thomson. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqExkWGzfBI&feature=relmfu
Inward Journey: The Life of Lawren Harris is available at bookstores and on line at: http://www.amazon.ca/Inward-Journey-Life-Lawren-Harris/dp/177102206X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1354119155&sr=1-1
Letter in front of Arthur Lismer's grave
Flowers, a child's bear pin and letter

Monday, 17 May 2010

May 20 Media Preview of McMichael Gallery's rehang of the pernament collection and two show openings!!!


You are invited to a Media Preview for the stunning new installation of the gallery’s permanent collection and two new exhibitions:

The Group of Seven: Revelations and Changing Perspectives
Following in the Footsteps of the Group of Seven
Dorothy Knowles: Land Marks
Along with the launch of our innovative website:
FootPrints: Legacy of the Group of Seven
www.groupofseven.ca

MEDIA PREVIEW
THURSDAY • MAY 20 • 2010
11:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.
McMichael Canadian Art Collection
10365 Islington Ave. (north of Major Mackenzie Dr.)
Kleinburg


The Group of Seven: Revelations and Changing Perspectives

Curated by Katerina Atanassova, Sharona Adamowicz-Clements, Chris Finn
Opening May 22, 2010

Experience the exceptional new installation of our renowned permanent collection. To mark the 90th anniversary of the Group of Seven’s first exhibition, rarely seen works from the McMichael collection and private collections are arrayed in the galleries in new and dynamic ways, opening up new themes and ideas to explore.

Following in the Footsteps of the Group of Seven
Curated by Sharona Adamowicz-Clements and Linda Morita
May 22 to September 6, 2010

For over thirty years, art enthusiasts Jim and Sue Waddington have been locating the exact sketching sites for artworks by Group of Seven members. This enchanting exhibition showcases the Group’s art alongside stunning photographs taken of the original locations that inspired these artworks some eighty years ago.

FootPrints: Legacy of the Group of Seven, www.groupofseven.ca
Inspired by the Waddingtons’ story, this virtual exhibition using Web 2.0 technology promises to transform how the McMichael and Canadian art are shared with the world. The site is divided into three layers: ADVENTURES links Group of Seven artworks to a corresponding Waddington story; the McMICHAEL STORY features over 200 unique art objects; and the COMMUNITY FORUM is designed to encourage Canadians to share how art, nature, and the creative spirit plays a role in their lives.
The McMichael wishes to gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Department of Canadian Heritage through the Canadian Culture Online Strategy.
Additionally, we wish to thank ecentricarts inc. and David Tarnow, Documentary and Multimedia Producer.

Dorothy Knowles: Land Marks
Organized by the Moose Jaw Museum and Art Gallery
Curated by Terry Fenton
May 22 to September 12, 2010

This exhibition celebrates Knowles’ favourite subjects—the lush river valleys and prairie landscapes that characterized her rural childhood. Knowles radically chose to document her own backyard during a time when abstract art was rapidly gaining ground.

About the Gallery

The McMichael Canadian Art Collection is an agency of the Government of Ontario and acknowledges the support of the Ministry of Tourism and Culture. It is the foremost venue in the country showcasing the Group of Seven and their contemporaries. In addition to touring exhibitions, its permanent collection consists of more than 5,500 artworks, including paintings by the Group of Seven and their contemporaries, First Nations and Inuit artists. The gallery is located at 10365 Islington Avenue, north of Major Mackenzie Drive in Kleinburg, and is open daily from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. For directions and information, visit www.mcmichael.com.
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Media Contact

Stephen Weir, Publicist
Gallery: 905.893.1121 ext. 2529
Toronto Office: 416.489.5868
Cell: 416.801.3101
sweir@mcmichael.com

Sunday, 16 May 2010

Minister Prentice (Environment/Parks Canada) and author Paul Duval and underwater photographer James Mathias unveil Studio Building plaque


Diver, Author, Cabinet Minister Unveil Plaque for Studio Building - building where Group of Seven and Tom Thomson worked.

Famed underwater photographer James Mathias and veteran arts writer/author Paul Duval were joined on Saturday, May 15th by Federal Minister of Environment Jim Prentice as Parks Canada unveiled a historic plaque in front of the Studio Building. The Studio building, which Mathias owns and lives in and where Duval rents an apartment, has a storied Toronto history.
The Studio Building, designed to be a workplace for artists, is an example of early 20th century modern architecture in Canada that rejected ornamentation and drew on industrial design. Its studios were specifically designed to let in the indirect northern sunlight - natural light sought out by artists for its clearness. The first six artists to use the Studio Building were Lawren Harris, Tom Thomson (who shared a studio with Jackson J. Beaty), A.Y. Jackson, J.E.H. MacDonald, Arthur Heming, and Albert Curtis Williamson.
Hosting several generations of artists, including the Group of Seven painters, the Studio Building is of enormous significance in the history of Canadian art. The building represents the contributions of generations of Canadian artists who produced the world-renowned paintings that are now prized possessions in museums across Canada and around the world. These artists shared a common interest in Canadian themes – together they radically changed and redefined the way Canadian art and artists were depicted.
The dedication ceremony was held in a park across the street from the Studio Building (which is located beside the Yonge Street subway near the Rosedale station). A small group of art lovers and friends of Mathias and Duval attended.
“Before the Group of Seven were able to gather and share their inspiration and creativity here in the Studio Building, the beauty of the Canadian landscape was not recognized. The artists who gathered here presented the magnificence of Canada to us and changed a vast empty wilderness into a stunning home – our home – that has foundations formed by the incredible and distinctly Canadian art created at this site, a home that is now the envy of the world,” said Minister Prentice when he unveiled a Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada plaque.
James Mathias has spent thousands of dollars restoring the Studio Building. He recently updated the large studio windows on the north face of the 3-story building. Mathias also paid tribute to his late adopted father, artist Gordon McNamara who owned the building for decades. It was McNamara who made the studio building available to the Canadian artists who followed the Group of Seven including Harold Town, the founder of Painters 11.
Paul Duval made a very rare public appearance and spoke at the Parks Canada ceremony. His 5-minute speech is printed below:
“I have known this building since I was a child” said Paul Duvall, at a special Saturday ceremony in downtown Toronto. “ I grew up one block away from here in Yorkville. My brothers used to bring me by here on the way to the Riverdale Zoo along Rosedale Valley Road (which runs by the Studio Building), which was then an unpaved thoroughfare.
“ I didn’t realize at that time, that I was passing exactly the same route that Tom Thomson would take from his shack (now at the McMichael Gallery) behind the studio building here, to draw animals in the very same zoo.
“I meet my first Group of Seven artist, Arthur Lismer, when they had children’s classes at the then Toronto Art Gallery (AGO) when I was 8-years old. That is when I first saw Group of Seven paintings and Tom Thomson’s works. “ he continued. “It wasn’t until I was 13 that I actually entered this building. That was because Paul Schaeffer, my art instructor at that time, suggested that the students should each have an artist to visit. He picked for me a man named Jackson.”
“ So I came to this gallery, walked up the stairs and met a man named Mr. Jackson. All I remember about him was that I was amazed that he put strings across his sketches in order to enlarge his canvasses. However, later we got to know each other very well. I was particularly fond of and became a good friend of Lawren Harris.
“I would like to speak particularly of him, not only did he devise the idea of this building and the other things the other gentleman (owner James Matthias) said. He was generous, he helped artists including Emily Carr, and he had great difficulties being accepted as an artist on a financial level.


“When young artists complain that they can’t be accepted, I like to tell that in 1959 when Harris was already a celebrated painter and a wealthy man from his inheritance, we sat together in a hotel over on Avenue Road, having lunch one day in 1959. About on us on the walls, surrounding us were the Harris paintings of the arctic and the Rockies. These had been put there by Dick Van Brockleberrie, the director of the Fine Arts Department of Eaton’s College Street which represented Harris in the hopes that someone would come in and having lunch or dinner and pay $1,500 for one of these large canvases, which now as you know bring $1 to $3 million dollars.”
“ Nothing has changed in that respect in Canadian art.”
Cutline: top: Honourable Jim Prentice, Canada's Environment Minister and Minister Responsible for Parks Canada (left), unveils an Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada plaque in front of the Studio building, home of the Group of Seven, with the help of building owner James Matthias (right) and long time resident Paul Duval (centre) during a ceremony in Toronto, Saturday, May 15, 2010.
Bottom: Following the plaque unveiling, underwater photographer James Mathias opened up his home (the Studio Building) for a reception. Mathias brought a little known Group of Seven painting out of storage and hung it back in the Studio Building for the party. Beaver Lake was painted by Lawren Harris.

Monday, 30 November 2009

FACT SHEET: MOOD ON DEMAND



Mood on Demand Fact Sheet

On December 1, Canadian television will change radically with the debut of Mood on Demand: a new and groundbreaking addition to Rogers’ Video on Demand (VOD)-Channel 100. Mood on Demand offers exclusive, high quality ambient content for flat-screen High Definition television- content that transforms a flat-panel TV into an art gallery.
Mood on Demand offers an art content stream. This is a unique only-for-HDTV exhibition of Canadian masterworks from The McMichael Canadian Art Collection. For .99 cents a day viewers can ‘hang’ two dozen paintings from the masters who captured the heart and soul of Canada. Among the works are:

• Lawren S. Harris- Pic Island (c.1924)
• Clarence Gagnon- The Chapdelaine Farm (1928-1933)
• Arthur Lismer- My Garden, Thornhill (c.1916)
• Tom Thomson- Snow Shadows (1916)
• A. Y. Jackson- Bent Pine (1948)
• Franklin Carmichael- Farm, Haliburton (1940)
• J.E.H. MacDonald-Snow, Lake O’Hara (1927)
• A.J. Casson- Fisherman's Point (c.1948)
• A.Y. Jackson Road to Baie St. Paul (1933)
The art lover has three viewing choices: a gallery-like slide-show presentation where all the work can be viewed and compared; a travel through each picture as the camera takes us seemingly inside each painting; a brilliantly engaging view of a single image at a time.
Mood on Demand represents new thinking about art; it is an innovative, compelling way to expand the art experience for the Canadian public.
Mood on Demand’s partnership with Rogers’s Cable VOD system is a global first that puts Canada at the fore of an exciting, revolutionary mood enhancing dimension of HDTV and Video on Demand. The new service launches December 1st.
Mood on Demand redefines the art experience by bringing the visual arts directly into the Canadian home. HDTV technology creates a lush cinematic viewing experience where spatial details and clarity result from an enhanced pixel count creating a previously unattainable level of pictorial quality. This intersection of cutting-edge TV technology and high art creates the possibility of an at-home art gallery. Some new HDTV sets units even come complete with actual picture frames.
Mood on Demand allows museums and art galleries to reach new audiences while answering HDTV owners’ demand for compelling HD content that goes beyond sports.
The remarkably robust market for flat-screen TV with Flat Panel Plasma and LCD televisions is poised to account for 100% of all television sales by 2010, compared to a mere 6% in 2004. Larger flat-screen sets are experiencing the most dramatic growth. Mood on Demand is perfectly positioned in terms of the current major transition to larger flat screens by offering unique content for the enhanced HD experience. These consumers are interested in higher-end HD content to showcase their televisions.

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CONTACT
Mood on Demand / Good Earth Productions
Bob Mackowycz: macko@sympatico.ca 647 808-4399
Mitch Azaria: azaria@goodearthproductions.com 416 766-4114