Toronto Star

The life and work of Lawren Harris in focus

Acclaimed Group of Seven leader honoured in TVO’s Where the Universe Sings

- LAUREN LA ROSE

With his paintings shattering records at auctions and an upcoming exhibit of his work at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Lawren Harris is having a career renaissanc­e more than four decades after his death.

Focus on the life and work of the legendary Group of Seven leader shifts to the screen with Where the Universe Sings: The Spiritual Journey of Lawren Harris, premiering Saturday at 9 p.m. on Ontario public service broadcaste­r TVO. The film will be available to stream at tvo.org beginning on Sunday.

Emmy-winning filmmaker Peter Raymont ( Shake Hands With the Devil) and first-time director Nancy Lang provide an hour-long portrait of the artist.

“He’s quite singular in Canadian history,” said Lang, who painted and exhibited for 15 years. “A hundred years later, people still are looking at his work as (among) the most important in Canada.”

Actor-comedian Steve Martin, who is curating the upcoming AGO exhibit, is among the leading Harris experts interviewe­d for the film, which also includes contributi­ons from the late artist’s grandchild­ren, Stew Sheppard and Toni Chowne.

Where the Universe Sings also showcases works by artists who influenced Harris, including Vincent van Gogh, Georgia O’Keeffe and Emily Carr, who was closely linked to the Group of Seven.

Acclaimed stage and screen star Colm Feore acts as the voice of Harris, reading letters written by the artist.

“He asked people to destroy them but, fortunatel­y, Emily Carr kept them and they became a window into his soul and his thinking and his feeling about many things,” said Raymont.

The filmmakers also gained insight into Harris’s own process as he tried to encourage Carr to keep painting, Lang noted.

“He was a very, very discipline­d man. It didn’t come easy. He worked at what he did. I think that was the other thing that was revealing, is how determined he was,” she said.

“He’s quite singular in Canadian history. A hundred years later, people still are looking at his work as (among) the most important in Canada.” NANCY LANG DIRECTOR/PAINTER

“He got up every morning and had a daily routine at which he worked. It wasn’t that this just happened to him. I think he worked hard to get where he did.”

One section of the film draws attention to several paintings created of the same subject: Pic Island off the north shore of Lake Superior.

“As you watch the evolution of his thinking as he experiment­s and strips away detail, and works and reworks the same painting and changes it, you do, I think, get a fascinatin­g insight, a real glimpse into the creative process,” said Raymont.

Ben Low portrays Harris in onscreen re-enactments filmed at various locations across Canada. This creative device helped the filmmak- ers compensate for the lack of real footage of Harris. Many of the photos of his early years were destroyed by his first wife, noted Lang.

“He really was a very modest man, did not want to be the centre of attention, so he was rarely filmed.”

Raymont and Lang said Harris’s foray into abstract work will be revelatory to many.

“It’s rare that you get an artist that travels so enormously in their work,” said Lang. “He went from highly representa­tional drawings of houses in Toronto and through this slow evo- lution into abstract . . . When he started painting abstract, they didn’t sell. People weren’t interested in them. And yet he still did it. He still pursued that and that’s unusual in an artist.

“Fortunatel­y, he was also in a position where he had means to do so. He was independen­tly wealthy and so he didn’t have to sell. But neverthele­ss, he did push and that’s where I give him great credit for doing that.”

Where the Universe Sings will re-air on TVO Sunday at 11 p.m. and on June 30 at 9 p.m. and midnight.

 ?? GEOFF EWART/WHITE PINE PICTURES/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The documentar­y, directed by Peter Raymont and Nancy Lang, features a scene of Ben Low as Lawren Harris painting his well-known Mount LeFroy.
GEOFF EWART/WHITE PINE PICTURES/THE CANADIAN PRESS The documentar­y, directed by Peter Raymont and Nancy Lang, features a scene of Ben Low as Lawren Harris painting his well-known Mount LeFroy.

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