Product Details
Group of Seven in Western Canada

Group of Seven in Western Canada
By The Glenbow Museum, Catharine Mastin

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Product Description

For more than 80 years, The Group of Seven has been Canada's best-known art collective. Founded in 1920, the Group--Franklin Carmichael, Lawren S. Harris, A.Y. Jackson, Frank H. Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J.E.H. MacDonald, Frederick H. Varley, A.J. Casson, Edwin Holgate, and Lionel LeMoine Fitzgerald-was recognized for their strikingly bold, modernist and colourful images of the Canadian landscape. In creating their art, the Group also contributed greatly to Canada's emerging sense of identity. In their inaugural exhibition catalogue, the Group poignantly wrote: 'An art must grow and flower in the land before the country will be a real home for its people.' In The Group of Seven in Western Canada , Catharine Mastin, curator of the Glenbow exhibition, along with five other Canadian scholars and curators explore the inspiration and influence of the west on both the Group's artwork and their sense of national identity. The book focuses on the significant themes and works produced by the Group from artistic, political, geographical, social and cultural perspectives in order to create the first, and most comprehensive, study of the Group's western muse. With 130 images and photographs to accompany the fascinating and insightful text, The Group of Seven in Western Canada is a unique and outstanding contribution to the history and legacy of Canadian art. The Glenbow Museum is a world-class multi-disciplinary institution that includes a permanent art collection, western Canada's largest museum, Canada's largest non-government archives, and an unparalleled western Canada reference library. Located in Calgary, it is world-renowned for its innovative programming and exhibitions.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #133825 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-07-25
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 208 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.ca
The first book to put a regional focus on Canada's best-known art movement, The Group of Seven in Western Canada remarkably puts a distinctly Western spin on this groundbreaking Toronto-based early 20th-century art collective. Edited by the senior curator of Calgary's Glenbow Museum, Catharine Mastin, and created as a companion piece to a landmark exhibition, The Group of Seven in Western Canada features six eye-opening perspectives on the Group's Western production and over 130 first-rate colour and black-and-white illustrations. Marcia Crosby's "T'emlax'am: An Ada'ox" is particularly intriguing in its insight into A.Y. Jackson and Edwin Holgate's interpretations--and misinterpretations--of the Skeena people, while Robert Stacey's chapter, "Heaven and Hell: Frederick Varley in Vancouver," dishes the dirt on the portrait painter's troubled relationships with his wife and lovers. Yet the underlying theme--that the Group's Western activities have been downplayed until now--comes off as a little strained, reflecting longstanding, and still current, regional Canadian cultural rivalries. The Group's members spent so much time in the West that their time there remains very much a part of the official record. Lawren Harris, Frank H. Johnson, and Frederick Varley all worked on staff at Western art institutions, later member Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald was a native Winnipegger, and other members--notably A.Y. Jackson and J.E.H. MacDonald--made regular painting trips to the West. Indeed, in 1920, when the Group of Seven was founded, free rail passes were still available to Canadian artists on the understanding that they would make images that would familiarize Eastern Canadians with this vast and newly accessible area, and all of the Group's members used the perk. Ironically, a significant percentage of the paintings reproduced in this book are owned by Eastern Canadian collections, a reminder that for decades the Group of Seven's works were notoriously undervalued on the Western Canadian art market. --Deirdre Hanna