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Franklin
Carmichael |
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Carmichael, the son of a carriage maker, was born in
Orillia, Ontario on May 4, 1890. He arrived in Toronto
in 1911 with some training in commercial art, and soon
found himself the associate of Tom Thomson and a number
of other commercial artists who were teaching themselves
to be serious painters.
In 1913 he went to Paris to study painting but was soon
back in Ontario to participate in the founding of the
Group of Seven. In 1932 he was appointed Head of Graphic
and Commercial Art at the Ontario College of Art.
He died in Toronto in 1945.
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A.
J. Casson |
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Alfred Joseph Casson was born in Toronto on May 17,
1898, and for more than eight decades his life was centred
in Southern Ontario.
He
was a young commercial artist, assistant to Frank Carmichael,
when the Group of Seven (of which Carmichael was a member)
was finally formed. This connection helped to lead A.J.
Casson to fame.
In 1926 the Group of Seven consisted of only six, because
of the withdrawal of Frank Johnston, and the group turned
to Casson in order to re-authenticate its name.
Casson
differred from the rest of the group, not only through
his late enrollment, but also in the fact that he continued
to work as a commercial artist until the age of sixty,
when he retired as Vice President and Art Director of
Samson-Mathews in Toronto. Casson's subjects also differ
somewhat from those of the rest of the group, for he
has never shown much interest in the North Woods landscape
of which the others were so fond. His favorite subjects
have consistently been rural scenes of Southern Ontario.
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L.L.
FitzGerald |
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Mr. FitzGerald lived from 1890-1956. He was a late arrival
to the Group of Seven Artists, and was invited to become
a Member in 1932. In 1921, he was honoured by putting
on a one-man show at the Winnipeg Art Gallery. After that
success, he studied in New York, and returned to Winnipeg
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Lawren
Harris |
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Lawren Harris was born on October 23, 1885, in Brantford,
Ontario, to a wealthy family - The Harrises of the Massey-Harris
industrial fortune.
He
took up painting at an early age and studied in Germany
from 1904 to 1907. He worked briefly with Norman Duncan,
illustrating several of Duncan's stories, but Harris
was in fact the only member of the Group of Seven who
was free all his life from monetary pressures and temptations
of commercial art and advertising designs.
Harris
is also the only member of the Group who kept pushing
his painting, never resting for long with one style
or one species of subject matter. Long after the Group
disbanded, Harris continued to grow and change as a
painter, moving eventually into art deco and pure abstraction.
He was also a talented ceramicist, and in 1922 he published
a volume of poems.
His
affection for Scandinavian landscape painting was one
of the key factors in the formulation of the Group of
Seven's approach to the Ontario woods, which Harris
himself painted with gusto and attention.
It
was Harris who led the way toward painting the high
Arctic, the Rocky Mountains, Gaspe and other unique
and powerful parts of the Canadian earth.
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Edwin
Holgate |
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Edwin Holgate lived from 1892-1977. He was a member
of the group for a brief period in 1931.
His
paintings contained some of the few nudes from the Group,
but he was careful not to make them too sexual, and
would conceal them by having a landscape in the background.
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A.
Y. Jackson |
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"A.Y.", as he is fondly known, was born in Montreal
on October 3, 1882.
Like
other members of the Group of Seven he was trained as
a Commercial Artist and for many years made his living
by that means. He apprenticed to a Montreal lithographer
at the age of 12, and though he later spent two and
a half years in France studying painting, he was soon
back in Canada paying his rent by designing cigar labels.
In 1920, with Lawren Harris, Arthur Lismer, Frank Carmichael,
Fred Varley, James MacDonald and Frank Johnston, he
formed the most famous exhibitors' group in the history
of Canadian painting: the Group of Seven.
In
the following years he painted the Arctic, the West
Coast, the Prairies, and the North Woods, as well as
his beloved St. Lawrence, where his countless sketching
expeditions earned him the nickname Pere Raquette- Pappa
Snowshoe.
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Frank
Johnston |
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Frank Johnston painted very much differently than the
other Group of Seven members. He chose close-up views
that often seemed crowded. Other works showed more simple
landscapes, with subtleties like clouds reflecting on
water. |
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Arthur
Lismer |
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Arthur Lismer celebrated the powerful beauty of the
Canadian landscape in his own expressionist style. His
paintings are characterized by vivid colour, deliberately
coarse brushwork and a simplified form.
Lismer
was born in Sheffield, England. At the age of 26, he
immigrated to Canada seeking work as a commercial illustrator.
It was at the Grip Engraving Company in Toronto that
he met a group of other talented young artists and formed
the Group of Seven. Together, they organized trips to
explore and sketch the wilderness - capturing the spirit
of Canada in their work, and setting Canadian art on
a bold and original new course.
Although
Lismer painted throughout his life, he devoted the majority
of his time to art education. A gifted teacher, Lismer
pioneered the field of child art education across Canada
and around the world.
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James
Edward Hervey (J.E.H.) MacDonald |
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A founding member of the Group of Seven, J.E.H. MacDonald
challenged and vastly broadened the scope of Canadian
Art. MacDonald believed that art should express the
"mood and character and spirit of the country", and
he portrayed his vision in vast panoramas using dark,
rich colours and a turbulent patterned style.
MacDonald
was born in Durham, England and moved to Canada at the
age of fourteen. He trained as an artist in Hamilton
and Toronto, pursuing a career in commercial art.
In
1895 he joined the Grip Engraving Company in Toronto
where he met and encouraged other staff members, including
Tom Thomson, Frank Carmichael, Arthur Lismer and Fred
Varley, to paint with him on weekends - laying the groundwork
for what would later become Canada's famous Group of
Seven.
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Tom
Thomson |
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Tom Thomson lived from 1877-1917. He died in 1917, at
one of the places he loved most, Canoe Lake. His death
occurred under "suspicious" circumstances.
Although
he died before the Group formally formed, he is almost
always included as a member of the Group of Seven.
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Frederick
Varley |
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Frederick Varley was born in 1881 in Sheffield, England.
He studied painting at Sheffield and Antwerp and went
to work in London as a commercial illustrator.
In
1912 he came to Canada, where he found himself working
in the same commercial studio as Tom Thomson. With Thomson
and the others he took to painting Northern Ontario
landscapes, and also began to do considerable work as
a portrait painter.
In
1926 Varley moved to Vancouver to become Head of Drawing,
Painting & Composition at the newly formed Vancouver
School of Decorative & Applied Arts. In 1933 he founded
his own school, the B.C. College of Arts, but this venture
led to his bankruptcy in 1935. In 1938 his marriage
also collapsed.
The next years were difficult for Varley, most of them
spent suffering from alcoholism in Montreal. In 1945,
however, he returned to Toronto and slowly began to
work again. He died in Toronto in 1969.
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Quick Fact:
The Group of Seven Canadian Painters were comprised of Franklin
Carmichael, Alfred Joseph Casson, Lionel Lemoine FitzGerald,
Lawren Stewart Harris, Edwin Holgate, Alexander Young Jackson,
Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, James Edward Hervey MacDonald,
Tom Thomson and Frederick Varley.
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