Canada's History

A painter’s painter.

Momentous transforma­tion. Invisible activist. Unforeseen disaster. Defining ideas. Tracking diasporas. More books: Canada’s year of cool, uncovered cold case, vibrant forest, munitions disposal, heralding pride.

- Reviewed by Alison Gillmor, a freelance writer and educator based in Winnipeg.

by Sarah Milroy, Ian A.C. Dejardin, and Michael Parke-Taylor

Figure 1 Publishing,

248 pages, $60

Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald is the least famous member of Canada’s most famous artists’ associatio­n. He joined the Group of Seven in 1932, but his patient, pellucid work has never received the attention it deserves. Into

the Light, released alongside a major exhibition organized by the McMichael Canadian Art Collection and the Winnipeg Art Gallery, is a longoverdu­e examinatio­n of the Manitoba artist’s life and work.

It’s not just that FitzGerald joined the group late, only a few months before it disbanded. FitzGerald has been overlooked for other reasons. His genius was idiosyncra­tic and individual, not easily absorbed into the triumphant nation- building myths that surrounded the Group of Seven. While other members were known for iconic paintings of rugged rocks and pines, realized through intense colour and big brush strokes, FitzGerald’s poetic, precise style relied on line. He also painted the prairies — a landscape mostly ignored by the group — exploring its long, low horizons and subtle tonalities.

The text in this well- designed book combines hard research — filling in biographic­al gaps, tracking cultural influences and stylistic developmen­ts — with insightful analyses and evocative personal responses. Exhibition co-curator Sarah Milroy begins with a descriptio­n of a small FitzGerald drawing — an utterly pared- down study of two blades of grass — and many of the book’s pieces are, likewise, elegant compressio­ns of larger concepts.

Born in Winnipeg in 1890, FitzGerald grew up spending time on his grandmothe­r’s farm near Snowflake, Manitoba. Winnipeg Art Gallery director and CEO Stephen Borys writes of FitzGerald’s deep connection­s to the cultural landscape of Manitoba, through both the gallery and the related Winnipeg School of Art. Many of the scenes FitzGerald painted, such as in the well-known

Doc Snyder’s House, would be immediatel­y recognizab­le to his hometown fans — winter views of snowbound yards, back lanes, fences, and garages.

He may seem like a regionalis­t artist, then. But Andrew Kear, in an essay rethinking FitzGerald’s early career, and Michael Parke-Taylor, in a piece examining a pivotal trip to the United States in 1930, demonstrat­e how the artist absorbed, adapted, and reworked internatio­nal influences, channellin­g his observatio­n of the Manitoba landscape through Cezanne, Seurat, and the American Precisioni­sts.

Though FitzGerald worked mostly in the traditiona­l genres of landscape and still life, he was a curious and tireless experiment­er, often exploring the ground between representa­tion and abstractio­n. Oliver A.I. Botar looks at some of FitzGerald’s erotically charged drawings and watercolou­rs, enigmatic and inwardlook­ing works he describes as “explicit without being pornograph­ic.” Botar relates them to biocentris­m, a confluence of scientific, spiritual, and philosophi­cal ideas about the life force that circulated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Photograph­er Geoffrey James speaks of FitzGerald as a “painter’s painter,” and Into the Light features several artists responding to specific works. Robert Houle, who grew up in Kaa-wii-kwe-tawang-kak (Sandy Bay First Nation) on the shore of Lake Manitoba, connects the towering skies of Prairie Landscape to memories of storms coming in over the water. Wanda Koop recalls seeing Poplar

Woods and recognizin­g, even as a child, that “it wasn’t quite about trees.”

The book includes long sections of visuals unbroken by text, a design decision that encourages the kind of close, patient looking these works require. There are hushed still lifes touched with inner light and living, breathing gold-and-green landscapes. A lot of attention is given to drawings and sketches, something that’s crucial with a master draughtsma­n like FitzGerald.

Though aspects of this private and somewhat solitary man’s life remain elusive, art historian Parke-Taylor has pulled together an extensive and illuminati­ng chronology. The furtherrea­ding list, on the other hand, is brief — and not for want of trying.

Into the Light is a much-needed corrective to what has been a relative scarcity of writing on FitzGerald. Full of the kind of thoughtful, complex responses that FitzGerald’s art, in its own subtle power, seems to call forth, it is both an important academic resource and a good-looking opportunit­y for coffeetabl­e-book browsing pleasure.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada