The Telegram (St. John's)

Mary Macdonald fondly remembered

- BY TARA BRADBURY tara.bradbury@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: @tara_bradbury

Creative. Dedicated. Enthusiast­ic. Inspiring. A relentless support to the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador arts community. These are some of the things those who knew Mary Macdonald are saying about her this week.

Creative. Dedicated. Enthusiast­ic. Inspiring. A relentless support to the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador arts community. These are some of the things those who knew Mary Macdonald are saying about her this week.

Macdonald died Tuesday at age 32, having been diagnosed with cancer last year.

A Nova Scotia native, Macdonald came to St. John’s in 2008 with a fine arts degree to work at Eastern Edge Gallery.

She threw herself into the local arts scene, friends say, with the goal of promoting it, and, to that end, left for Toronto to earn a master’s degree in criticism and curation, with a specializa­tion in rural art and community. She returned first to Pictou, N.S., and then came back to Eastern Edge in 2012 as executive director, a position she held for three years.

“Mary shaped the gallery with a heart that included everyone, reinforced the arts community and extended our reach far beyond,” artist Philippa Jones, friend and current executive director of the gallery, wrote to Eastern Edge’s membership in an email. “While at Eastern Edge, Mary worked to gain recognitio­n for Newfoundla­nd art, making local artists part of the national conversati­on. She accomplish­ed this not just through exhibition­s, but by seeking connection­s, making correlatio­ns and introducti­ons between artists, successful­ly campaignin­g for the Canada Council to visit the province, and nominating Newfoundla­nd and Labrador artists for awards and opportunit­ies.”

Macdonald left her role at the gallery, Jones says, to spend less time on arts administra­tion and more time on curation and writing.

“Every time I went to an arts event, Mary would be there,” Jones says. “Mary’s support was relentless. She made things happen. Mary was the first person I went to for advice because she treasured the legacy of knowledge she cultivated at Eastern Edge and within the arts community as a whole.”

Macdonald was also a cofounder of Girls Rock NL, a non-profit organizati­on offering free summer camps for girls interested in playing music and forming bands. This year’s Girls Rock NL camp will have its final showcase Friday night at The Lantern in St. John’s, starting at 6 p.m.

Macdonald’s sister, Anna Kate Newman, posted the news of her death on Facebook Wednesday.

“Mary has been released,” Newman wrote. “Yesterday morning her beautiful and wondrous soul was catapulted into the intergalac­tic, as a friend’s letter beautifull­y said. She is free from pain now and probably curating something larger for us all.

“Her 32 years were brief, but boy were they big and beautiful.”

A celebratio­n of Macdonald’s life is being planned for the fall.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Mary Macdonald was an artist, art curator, administra­tor and writer, known to many in the local arts community as a mentor. She died this week after a fight with cancer, age 32.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Mary Macdonald was an artist, art curator, administra­tor and writer, known to many in the local arts community as a mentor. She died this week after a fight with cancer, age 32.

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