The Daily Courier

RARE GROUP OF SEVEN ARTWORK IN KELOWNA

Local art gallery a proud host – B3

- Special to the Okanagan Newspaper Group

Okanagan audiences will soon be able to explore a seldom seen side of Canadian art history at the Kelowna Art Gallery.

Organized by the gallery to mark the 100th anniversar­y of the first Group of Seven exhibition in 1920, Northern Pine: Watercolou­rs and Drawings by the Group of Seven from the McMichael Canadian Art Collection presents 66 of the Group’s largely unknown works, including a selection of watercolou­r studies, graphite sketches, and a rare portfolio of lithograph­s.

“The works are very accessible,” said Nataley Nagy, executive director at the Kelowna Art Gallery. “We hope visitors will be as fascinated as we were to see these stripped-down working sketches and studies — they truly give us a window into who these seven artists were and how they came to influence the Canadian artistic landscape.”

The Group of Seven was formed by artists Franklin Carmichael, Lawren Harris, A.Y. Jackson, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J. E. H. MacDonald, and F. H. Varley. They were responsibl­e for the first major national art movement in Canada and are perhaps best known for their vivid oil paintings showcasing the Canadian landscape.

Before they were recognized as accomplish­ed artists, the members of the Group of Seven plied their trade as draughtsme­n and found work as commercial artists, while still sketching and honing their artistic practices. It is this intimately revealing aspect of their work that visitors will get a chance to see.

Ian M. Thom ( former Curator at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, and McMichael Canadian Art Collection), who has organized over 100 exhibition­s across Canada and published extensivel­y, is the guest curator responsibl­e for the exhibition, hand-picking the art that will be on display, the majority of which was borrowed from the McMichael’s collection in Kleinburg, Ontario.

“The McMichael’s collection of drawings and other works on paper by the members of the Group of Seven is a glory of our museum’s holdings too often hidden from view,” said Sarah Milroy, chief curator at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection. “Often accomplish­ed works of art in their own right, these works provide us a backstage pass to the workings of the Group, and they challenge the canonical gravity with which their paintings have increasing­ly been viewed. This was a band of upstarts and adventurer­s after all, and their drawings return us to that fact.”

Audiences will be treated to a variety of these works, including a 1912-13 sketch by Arthur Lismer of colleague and fellow artist Tom Thomson, and a series of visceral studies by Lawren Harris of mountainou­s landscapes that point to some of his future paintings.

Northern Pine is guest curated by Ian Thom and organized by the Kelowna Art Gallery, with the support of Rogers’ Family Charitable Trust, and Pushor Mitchell LLP Lawyers.

The exhibition runs from Oct. 24, 2020, to March 7, 2021. It will be accompanie­d by a 116-page full colour catalogue that features several essays and reproducti­ons of the works presented in Northern Pine.

The Kelowna Art Gallery is located at 1315 Water Street in the heart of the downtown Cultural District. For more informatio­n, visit kelownaart­gallery. com or call 250-762-2226.

 ??  ?? Arthur Lismer’s sketch of his colleague Tom Thomson was drawn around 1912, using ink over graphite on paper.
Arthur Lismer’s sketch of his colleague Tom Thomson was drawn around 1912, using ink over graphite on paper.

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