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Emily Carr

Emily Carr (December 13, 1871 – March 2, 1945) was a Canadian artist who was inspired by the monumental art and villages of the First Nations and the landscapes of British Columbia.[1] She also was a vivid writer and chronicler of life in her surroundings, praised for her "complete candour" and "strong prose".[2] Klee Wyck, her first book, published in 1941, won the Governor General's Literary Award for non-fiction[3] and this book and others written by her or compiled from her writings later are still much in demand today.

Emily Carr
Carr in 1888
Born
Millie Emily Carr

(1871-12-13)December 13, 1871
DiedMarch 2, 1945(1945-03-02) (aged 73)
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Education
Known forPainting (The Indian Church, Big Raven), writing (Klee Wyck)
MovementPost-Impressionism

Carr's keynote paintings, such as The Indian Church (1929), were not widely known in Canada at first. But her stature as one of Canada's most important artists continued to grow. Today, she is considered a cherished figure of Canadian arts and letters.[4] Scholars and the public alike regard her as a Canadian national treasure[5] and the Canadian Encyclopedia describes her as a Canadian icon.[6] She has been designated a National Historic Person[7] and had a Minor planet 5688 Kleewyck named after her anglicized native name.[8][4][5] As one scholar in her 2014 book on Carr, put it, "we love her and she continues to speak to us".[9]

Emily Carr lived most of her life in the city in which she was born and died, Victoria, British Columbia.

Early life edit

 
Emily Carr House, 207 Government Street, Victoria – now a National Historic Site of Canada and a museum

Born in Victoria, British Columbia, in 1871,[10][11][12] the year British Columbia joined Canada, Emily Carr was the second youngest of nine children born to English parents Richard and Emily (Saunders) Carr.[13][14] The Carr home was on Birdcage Walk (now Government Street), in the James Bay district of Victoria, a short distance from the legislative buildings (nicknamed the 'Birdcages') and the town itself. Today it is a museum and National Historic Site of Canada called Emily Carr House.

The Carr children were raised in an English tradition. Her father believed it was sensible to live on Vancouver Island, a colony of Great Britain, where he could practice English customs and continue his British citizenship. The family home was made up in lavish English fashion, with high ceilings, ornate moldings, and a parlour.[15] Carr was taught in the Presbyterian tradition, with Sunday morning prayers and evening Bible readings. Her father called on one child per week to recite the sermon, and Emily consistently had trouble reciting it.[16]

Carr's mother died in 1886, and her father died in 1888.[17] Her oldest sister Edith Carr became the guardian of the rest of the children.[18][12]

Carr's father encouraged her artistic inclinations, but it was only in 1890, after her parents' deaths, that Carr pursued her art seriously. She studied at the California School of Design in San Francisco for three years (1890–1893) before returning to Victoria. In 1899, Carr visited Ucluelet on the west coast of Vancouver Island.[17] That same year, Carr traveled to London, where she decided to transform herself into a professional artist and to make it her life's calling.[19]

She began her studies at the Westminster School of Art.[4] She then took art classes from John William Whiteley in Bushey, Hertfordshire and afterwards traveled to an art colony in St Ives, Cornwall, studying with Julius Olsson and Algernon Talmage (1901). In 1902, she returned to Bushey, and studied with Whiteley, till she experienced a nervous breakdown and had to convalesce.

She returned to British Columbia in 1904. In 1905, she gave children's art classes as well as creating political cartoons for the Week, a newspaper in Victoria[5] and in 1906, Carr took a teaching position in Vancouver at the Vancouver Studio Club and School of Art for a short time – she was a popular teacher but left to open her own studio and give children's art classes.[4]

First works on Indigenous people edit

In 1898, at age 27, Carr made the first of several sketching and painting trips to Aboriginal villages.[20] She stayed in a village near Ucluelet on the west coast of Vancouver Island, home to the Nuu-chah-nulth people, then commonly known to English-speaking people as 'Nootka'.[20] Carr was given the Indigenous name of Klee Wyck and she also chose it as the title of her first book.[21] She later recalled that her time in Ucluelet made "a lasting impression on me".[20]

In 1907, Carr made a sightseeing trip to Alaska with her sister Alice and decided on her artistic mission of documenting all she could of what she and many others perceived as the "vanishing totems" and way of life of the First Nations.[4] She may have met an American artist on this trip, likely Theodore J. Richardson (1855-1914), who described his project of documenting Indigenous art and architecture (he travelled with Indigenous guides to produce watercolours and pastels in southeast Alaska documenting the Tlingit culture) and that possibly this encounter inspired Carr to initiate her own five–year project of documenting Indigenous villages and their neighbouring forests in British Columbia.[22][5]

From 1908 to 1910 she made several trips to First Nations communities to record art and villages.[5]

Work in France edit

Determined to further her knowledge of evolving artistic trends abroad, in 1910 Carr returned to Europe to study. In Montparnasse with her sister Alice, Emily Carr met modernist painter Harry Phelan Gibb with a letter of introduction.[23] Upon viewing his work, she and her sister were shocked and intrigued[24] by his use of distortion and vibrant colour; she wrote:

"Mr Gibb's landscapes and still life delighted me — brilliant, luscious, clean. Against the distortion of his nudes I felt revolt."[23]

Carr enrolled at the Académie Colarossi in Paris, then transferred to private lessons with John Duncan Fergusson and followed him to the Atelier Blanche. After a bout of illness, she joined Gibb and his wife in the small village of Crécy-en-Brie and then St. Efflam, Brittany. Carr's study with Gibb and his techniques shaped and influenced her style of painting, and she adopted a vibrant colour palette rather than continuing with the more modified colours of her earlier training.[25]

 
Emily Carr, Breton church, oil on canvas, 1906

In Crecy-en-Brie she fully embraced the Fauve style of bold colour and broad brushwork, then traveled to Concarneau on the coast of Brittany to study with Frances Hodgkins. When she returned to Paris she found that two of her paintings had been selected by the jury and hung in the 1911 Salon d'Automne.[4]

Return to Canada edit

 
Emily Carr, 1930

In March 1912 Carr opened a studio at 1465 West Broadway in Vancouver. She organized an exhibition of seventy watercolours and oils representative of her time in France, using her radical new style, bold colour palette and lack of detail.[4] She was the first artist to introduce Post-Impressionism to Vancouver.[22]

Later in 1912, Carr took a sketching trip to First Nations' villages in Haida Gwaii (formerly the Queen Charlotte Islands), the Upper Skeena River, and Alert Bay [4][26] where she documented the art of the Haida, Gitxsan and Tsimshian. At Cumshewa, a Haida village on Moresby Island, she wrote in Klee Wyck,

"Cumshewa seems always to drip, always to be blurred with mist, its foliage always to hang wet-heavy ... these strong young trees ... grew up round the dilapidated old raven, sheltering him from the tearing winds now that he was old and rotting ... the memory of Cumshewa is of a great lonesomeness smothered in a blur of rain".

Carr painted a carved raven, which she later developed as her iconic painting Big Raven. Tanoo, another painting inspired by work gathered on this trip, depicts three totems before house fronts at the village of the same name. On her return to the south, Carr organized a large exhibition of some of this work. She gave a detailed public talk titled "Lecture on Totem Poles" about the Aboriginal villages that she had visited, which ended with her mission statement:

"I glory in our wonderful west and I hope to leave behind me some of the relics of its first primitive greatness. These things should be to us Canadians what the ancient Briton's relics are to the English. Only a few more years and they will be gone forever into silent nothingness and I would gather my collection together before they are forever past".[27]

Her "Lecture on Totems" at Dominion Hall in Vancouver is in the Emily Carr Papers at the British Columbia Provincial Archives in Victoria.[28] In the lecture, she said "every pole shown in my collection has been studied from its own actual reality..."

While there was some positive reaction to her work, even in the new 'French' style,[29] Carr perceived that Vancouver's reaction to her work and new style was not positive enough to support her career. She recounted as much in her book Growing Pains. She was determined to give up teaching and working in Vancouver, and in 1913 she returned to Victoria, where several of her sisters still lived.[23]

During the next 15 years, Carr did little painting. She ran a boarding house known as the 'House of All Sorts'. It was the namesake and provided source material for her later book. With her financial circumstances straitened and her life in Victoria circumscribed, Carr painted a few works in this period drawn from local scenes: the cliffs at Dallas Road, the trees in Beacon Hill Park. Her own assessment of the period was that she had ceased to paint, which was not strictly true, although "[a]rt had ceased to be the primary drive of her life".[30]

 
Emily Carr, Kitwancool, 1928

Growing recognition edit

Over time Carr's work came to the attention of several influential and supportive people, including (through the intervention of Victoria-born artist Sophie Pemberton in 1921) Harold Mortimer Lamb and Marius Barbeau, a prominent ethnologist at the National Museum in Ottawa. Barbeau in turn persuaded Eric Brown, Director of Canada's National Gallery, to visit Carr in 1927.[31] Brown invited Carr to exhibit her work at the National Gallery as part of an exhibition on West Coast art. Carr sent 65 oil paintings east (31 were included),[4] along with samples of her pottery and rugs with Indigenous designs.[32] The exhibition, which was largely of First Nations art, included works by Edwin Holgate and A.Y. Jackson as well as Carr, traveled to Toronto and Montreal.

Association with the Group of Seven edit

 
Carr's The Indian Church, 1929. Lawren Harris bought the painting and showcased it in his home. He considered it Carr's best work. It was controversially retitled in 2018 by the Art Gallery of Ontario to Church at Yuquot Village

Carr made the trip east for the exhibition on West Coast art: Native and modern at the National Gallery of Canada in 1927. She met Frederick Varley in Vancouver and other members of the Group of Seven, at that time Canada's most recognized modern painters[17] at the show's Toronto venue.[4]

Lawren Harris of the Group became an important mentor and friend. "You are one of us," he told Carr, welcoming her into the ranks of Canada's leading modernists and along with other members of the Group into the Group of Seven shows as an invited contributor in 1930 and 1931.[22]

Her encounter with the Group ended the artistic isolation of Carr's previous 15 years, leading to one of her most prolific periods, and the creation of many of her most notable works. Through her extensive correspondence with Harris, Carr also became aware of and studied Northern European symbolism.[33]

Carr's artistic direction was influenced by Harris's work and the advice he gave in his correspondence (he told her to seek an equivalent for the totem poles in west coast landscape, for instance),[34] but also by his belief in Theosophy.[17] She was deeply interested and struggled to reconcile this with her own conception of God.[35] Carr's "distrust for institutional religion" pervades much of her art.[36] She thought a great deal about Theosophic thought, like many artists of the time, but in the end, remained unconvinced.[36][37]

Influence of the Pacific Northwest school edit

In 1924 and 1925, Carr exhibited at the Artists of the Pacific Northwest shows in Seattle, Washington. She invited fellow exhibitor Mark Tobey to visit her in Victoria in the autumn of 1928 to teach a master class in her studio. Working with Tobey, Carr furthered her understanding of modern art, experimenting with Tobey's methods of full-on abstraction and Cubism, but she was reluctant to follow Tobey beyond the legacy of Cubism.[33][38][39]

I was not ready for abstraction. I clung to earth and her dear shapes, her density, her herbage, her juice. I wanted her volume and I wanted to hear her throb.[40]

Although Carr expressed reluctance about abstraction, Doris Shadbolt at the Vancouver Art Gallery, a major curator of Carr's work, records Carr in this period as abandoning the documentary impulse and starting to concentrate instead on capturing the emotional and mythological content embedded in the totemic carvings. She jettisoned her painterly and practiced Post-Impressionist style in favour of creating highly stylized and abstracted geometric forms.[38]

Later developments edit

 
Odds and Ends, 1939

Carr continued to travel throughout the late 1920s and 1930s away from Victoria. One of her last trips north was in the summer of 1928, when she visited the Nass and Skeena rivers, as well as Haida Gwaii, formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands. She went to Yuquot (also known as Friendly Cove) and the northeast coast of Vancouver Island in 1930, and then to Lillooet in 1933.[4] In the same year she bought a caravan she nicknamed the "Elephant" and had it towed to places she wanted to paint, going to nearby locations such as Goldstream Flats,the Esquimalt Lagoon and elsewhere.[37]

Recognition of her work grew steadily, and in 1930 she exhibited in Ottawa, Victoria and Seattle, and in 1935, Carr's first solo show of her oil on paper works was held in eastern Canada at the Women's Art Association of Canada gallery in Toronto.[41] In 1938 she had her first annual solo exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery as well as success at the Tate Gallery in London, England.[4] Other shows abroad followed.[42]

She began to meet other artists. In 1930, for instance, Carr travelled to New York and met Georgia O’Keefe.[4] In 1933, she was a founding member of the Canadian Group of Painters.[4]

Paintings from Carr's last decade reveal her growing anxiety about the environmental impact of industry on British Columbia's landscape. Her work from this time reflected her growing concern over industrial logging, its ecological effects and its encroachment on the lives of Indigenous people. In her painting Odds and Ends, from 1939 "the cleared land and tree stumps shift the focus from the majestic forestscapes that lured European and American tourists to the West Coast to reveal instead the impact of deforestation."[22]

Shift of focus and late life edit

Carr suffered her first heart attack in 1937, and another in 1939, forcing her to move in with her sister Alice to recover. In 1940 Carr suffered serious trouble with her heart, and in 1942 she had another heart attack.[43] With her ability to travel curtailed, Carr's focus shifted from her painting to her writing. The editorial assistance of Carr's great friend and literary advisor Ira Dilworth,[19] a professor of English, enabled Carr to see her own first book, Klee Wyck, published in 1941.[17] Carr was awarded the Governor General's Literary Award for non-fiction the same year for the work.[44][45]

In 1942 Carr established the Emily Carr Trust, and donated close to 170 paintings to the Vancouver Art Gallery. She suffered her last heart attack and died on March 2, 1945, at the James Bay Inn in her hometown of Victoria, British Columbia, shortly before she was to have been awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of British Columbia.[46] Carr is buried at Ross Bay Cemetery.

Work edit

Painting edit

 
Autumn in France, 1911. National Gallery of Canada
 
Among the Firs, c. 1931, Glenbow Museum, Calgary
 
Above the Gravel Pit, 1937

Carr is remembered primarily for her painting. She was one of the artists who attempted to capture the spirit of Canada in a modern style. Carr's main themes in her mature work were the monumental works of the First Nations and nature: "native totem poles set in deep forest locations or sites of abandoned native villages" and, later, "the large rhythms of Western forests, driftwood-tossed beaches and expansive skies".[6] She blended these two themes in ways uniquely her own. Her "qualities of painterly skill and vision [...] enabled her to give form to a Pacific mythos that was so carefully distilled in her imagination".[6]

At the California School of Design in San Francisco, Carr participated in art classes which were focused on a variety of artistic styles. Many of Carr's art professors were trained in the Beaux Arts tradition in Paris, France. Though she took classes in drawing, portraiture, still life, landscape painting, and flower painting, Carr preferred to paint landscapes.[47]

Carr is known for her paintings of First Nations villages and Pacific Northwest Indian totems, but Maria Tippett explains that Carr's depictions of the forests of British Columbia from within make her work unique.[48] Carr constructed a new understanding of Cascadia. This understanding includes a new approach to the presentation of native people and Canadian landscapes.[49]

After visiting the Gitksan village of Kitwancool in the summer of 1928, Carr became captivated by the maternal imagery in Pacific Northwest Indigenous totem poles. After Carr was exposed to these types of images, her paintings reflected these images of mother and child in Native carvings.[47]

Her painting can be divided into several distinct phases: her early work, before her studies in Paris; her early paintings under the Fauvist influence of her time in Paris; a Post Impressionist middle period[30] before her encounter with the Group of Seven; and her later, formal period, under the cubist and post-cubist influences of Lawren Harris and American artist and friend, Mark Tobey.[50] Carr used charcoal and watercolour for her sketches, and beginning in 1932, house paint thinned with gasoline on manila paper.[51] The greatest part of her mature work was oil on canvas or, when money was scarce, oil on paper.

Legacy edit

Carr's work is still of relevance today to contemporary artists. Her painting Old Time Coast Village (1929–30) is referred to in Korean Canadian artist Jin-me Yoon's A Group of Sixty-Seven (1996). The work is composed of sixty-seven portraits of the Korean Canadian community in Vancouver standing in front of Old Time Coast Village and a landscape painting by Group of Seven member Lawren Harris.[52]

Writings by Carr edit

  • Fresh Seeing. Clarke, Irwin and Company, 1972 [53]
  • Growing Pains. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2005;[54]
  • Hundreds and Thousands. The Journals of Emily Carr. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2006;[55]
  • Klee Wyck. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2004;[56]
  • Pause: A Sketchbook. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2007;[57]
  • The Book of Small. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2004;[58]
  • The Heart of a Peacock. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2005;[59]
  • The House of All Sorts. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2004;[60]

Writing by Carr edited by other authors edit

  • Bridge, Kathryn ed. Sister & I From Victoria to London. Victoria: Royal BC Museum, 2011[61]
  • Bridge, Kathryn ed. Wildflowers. Victoria: Royal BC Museum, 2000;[62]
  • Crean, Susan ed., Opposite Contraries. The Unknown Journals of Emily Carr and other writings Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2003;[63]
  • Morra, Linda ed. Corresponding Influence. Selected Letters of Emily Carr & Ira Dilworth. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2006;[64]
  • Silcox, David P., ed. Sister & I in Alaska. Vancouver: Figure 1, 2014;[65]
  • Switzer, Ann-Lee ed. This and That. The Lost Stories of Emily Carr. Victoria: Touchwood Editions, 2007;[66]
  • Walker, Doreen ed. Dear Nan. Letters of Emily Carr, Nan Cheney and Humphrey Toms. Vancouver: UBC Press, 1990.[67]

Biographies of Emily Carr edit

  • Baldiserra, Lisa. Emily Carr, Life and Times. Art Canada Institute.[68]
  • Bridge, Kathryn ed. Emily Carr in England. Victoria: Royal BC Museum, 2014;[69]
  • Hembroff-Schleicher, Edythe. Emily Carr: The Untold Story. Saanichton: Hancock House, 1978;[70]
  • Shadbolt, Doris. The Art of Emily Carr. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre and Clarke Irwin, 1979.[71]
  • Shadbolt, Doris. Emily Carr. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1990.[72]
  • Shadbolt, Doris. Seven Journeys: The Sketchbooks of Emily Carr. Douglas & McIntyre, 2002.[73]
  • Thom, Ian M. and Charles Hill (ed). Emily Carr: New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon. Vancouver and Ottawa: Vancouver Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Canada, 2006.[74]
  • Tippett, Maria. Emily Carr. A Biography. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1979.[75]

Recognition edit

 
Blunden Harbour, 1930, National Gallery of Canada

Carr's life itself made her a "Canadian icon", according to the Canadian Encyclopedia.[6] As well as being "an artist of stunning originality and strength", she was an exceptionally late bloomer, starting the work for which she is best known at the age of 57 (see Grandma Moses). Carr was also an artist who succeeded against the odds, living in an artistically unadventurous society, and working mostly in seclusion away from major art centres, thus making her "a darling of the women's movement" (like Georgia O'Keeffe, whom she met in 1930 in New York City).[6] Emily Carr brought the north to the south; the west to the east; glimpses of the ancient culture of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas to the most newly arrived Europeans on the continent.

However, art historians who write about Carr in depth often respond to their particular points of view: Feminist studies (Sharyn R. Udall, 2000), First Nations scholarship (Gerta Moray, 2006), or the critical study of what an artist says as a tool to analyze the work itself (Charles C. Hill, Ian M. Thom, 2006).[76]

In 1952, works by Emily Carr along with those of David Milne, Goodridge Roberts and Alfred Pellan represented Canada at the Venice Biennale. [77]

 
1971 Canada stamp honoring Emily Carr, based on her painting Big Raven

On February 12, 1971, Canada Post issued a 6¢ stamp 'Emily Carr, painter, 1871–1945' designed by William Rueter based on Carr's Big Raven (1931), held by the Vancouver Art Gallery.[78] On May 7, 1991, Canada Post issued a 50¢ stamp 'Forest, British Columbia, Emily Carr, 1931–1932' designed by Pierre-Yves Pelletier based on Forest, British Columbia (1931–1932), also from the Vancouver Art Gallery collection.[79]

In 1978, she was awarded the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Medal.[80] In 2014–2015, the Dulwich Picture Gallery in south London hosted a solo exhibition, the first time such show was held in Britain.[81] In 2020, a travelling exhibition organized by the Audain Art Museum in Whistler, B.C. and co-curated by Kiriko Watanabe and Dr. Kathryn Bridge and titled Emily Carr: Fresh Seeing – French Modernism and the West Coast explored this aspect of Carr's work in detail.[82]

Record sale prices edit

On November 28, 2013, one of Carr's paintings, The Crazy Stair (The Crooked Staircase), sold for $3.39 million at Heffel's live auction in Toronto.[83] As of the sale, it is a record price for a painting by a Canadian female artist.

At the Cowley Abbott Auction in Toronto, December 1, 2022, Carr's The Totem of the Bear and the Moon (1912), oil on canvas, 37 x 17.75 ins (94 x 45.1 cms), Auction Estimate: $2,000,000.00 - $3,000,000.00, sold for $3,120,000.00.[84]

At the Cowley Abbott Auction of An Important Private Collection of Canadian Art, December 6, 2023, lot 129, Carr's Nirvana, oil on paper, mounted on canvas, 35.25 x 20.25 ins (89.5 x 51.4 cm), Auction Estimate: $250,000.00 - $350,000.00, realized a price of $744,000.00.[85]

Institutions named for Carr edit

 
Emily Carr's gravestone, Ross Bay cemetery

Archives edit

The British Columbia Archives holds the largest collection of Emily Carr artworks, sketches, and archival materials, which includes the Emily Carr fonds, the Emily Carr Art Collection, and a wealth of archival documents held in the fonds of Carr's friends. There is an Emily Carr fonds at Library and Archives Canada.[96] The archival reference number is R1969, former archival reference number MG30-D215.[97] The fonds covers the date range 1891 to 1991. It consists of 1.764 meters of textual records, 10 photographs, 1 print, 7 drawings. A number of the records have been digitized and are available online.[98] Library and Archives Canada also holds a number of other fonds containing material that touch on Emily Carr and her artistic works.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Morra, Linda M. (2005). "Canadian Art According to Emily Carr". Canadian Literature. 185: 43–57. ISSN 0008-4360. from the original on February 3, 2017. Retrieved March 19, 2017.
  2. ^ Kathleen Coburn, "Emily Carr: In Memoriam" Canadian Forum, vol. 25 (April 1945), p. 24.
  3. ^ "Governor General's Literary Award". ggbooks.ca. Governor General of Canada. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Emily Carr: Timeline". royalbcmuseum.bc.ca. Royal BC Museum. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e Carr, Emily (2021). Unvarnished Emily Carr: Autobiographical Sketches by Emily Carr, edited by Dr. Kathryn Bridge, Preface. Victoria: Royal BC Museum. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e Shadbolt (June 23, 2013). "Emily Carr". Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  7. ^ "Carr, Emily National Historic Person". www.pc.gc.ca/. Gov't of Canada. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  8. ^ (5688) Kleewyck In: Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer. 2003. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29925-7_5383. ISBN 978-3-540-29925-7.
  9. ^ Bridge (2014), p. 8.
  10. ^ MacKenzie, Lily Iona (July 3, 2019). "Emily Carr: An Artist's Evolution: December 13, 1871 – March 2, 1945". Jung Journal. 13 (3): 119–134. doi:10.1080/19342039.2019.1637187. ISSN 1934-2039. S2CID 203303364.
  11. ^ Great women artists. Phaidon Press. 2019. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-7148-7877-5.
  12. ^ a b "Emily Carr | CWRC/CSEC". cwrc.ca. Retrieved March 28, 2023.
  13. ^ BC Heritage
  14. ^ Vancouver Art Gallery
  15. ^ Kate Braid, Emily Carr: Rebel Artist, Toronto, Ontario, XYZ Éditeur, 2000, p. 13
  16. ^ Braid (2000), pp. 15–16.
  17. ^ a b c d e Walker, Stephanie Kirkwood. This woman in particular: contexts for the biographical image of Emily Carr. Waterloo, Ontario. ISBN 978-0-88920-565-9. OCLC 923765615.
  18. ^ "Emily's Siblings". BC Heritage. May 26, 2013. from the original on May 26, 2013. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  19. ^ a b Bridge (2014), p. 9.
  20. ^ a b c Tippett, Maria (1979). Emily Carr: A Biography. Toronto: Oxford University Press. pp. 49–50.
  21. ^ Stewart, Janice (2005). "Cultural Appropriations and Identificatory Practices in Emily Carr's "Indian Stories"". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 26 (2): 59–72. doi:10.1353/fro.2005.0030. ISSN 0160-9009. JSTOR 4137396. S2CID 143814184.
  22. ^ a b c d Baldissera, Lisa (2015). (PDF). Art Canada Institute. ISBN 978-1-4871-0044-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 7, 2015., p. 36.
  23. ^ a b c Carr, Emily (2005). Growing pains : the autobiography of Emily Carr, foreword by Ira Dilworth, introduction by Robin Laurence. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
  24. ^ Braid (2000), pp. 61–63.
  25. ^ Braid (2000), p. 66.
  26. ^ Vancouver Art Gallery, Early totems July 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ Shadbolt, Doris (1979). The Art of Emily Carr. Toronto, Ontario: Douglas & McIntyre and Clarke, Irwin & Company. p. 38. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  28. ^ "Emily Carr". Art Canada Institute – Institut de l'art canadien. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
  29. ^ Shadbolt (1990), p. 40.
  30. ^ a b Shadbolt (1990), p. 42.
  31. ^ Shadbolt (1990), p. 52.
  32. ^ Shadbolt (1990), p. 53.
  33. ^ a b Vancouver Art Gallery, Artistic Context July 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ "Emily Carr: To the Totem Forests Introduction". www.emilycarr.org. AGGV. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  35. ^ Shadbolt (1990), p. 58.
  36. ^ a b Walker, Stephanie Kirkwood (1996). This Woman in Particular: Contexts for the Biographical Image of Emily Carr. Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 978-0-88920-263-4.
  37. ^ a b Carr, Emily (2021). Unvarnished Emily Carr: Autobiographical Sketches by Emily Carr edited by Dr. Kathryn Bridge. Victoria, BC: Royal BC Museum. p. 113. Retrieved December 10, 2023.
  38. ^ a b Vancouver Art Gallery, Modernism and Late Totems July 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ Ruth Stevens Appelhof, The Expressionist Landscape: North American Modernist Painting, 1920–1947, Birmingham Museum of Art, 1988, p.60
  40. ^ Carr (2005), p. 457.
  41. ^ Holmlund, Mona; Youngberg, Gail (2003). Inspiring Women: A Celebration of Herstory. Coteau Books. p. 216. ISBN 978-1-55050-204-6.
  42. ^ Breuer, Michael; Dodd, Kerry Mason (1984). Sunlight in the Shadows: The Landscape of Emily Carr. Toronto: Oxford University Press. p. VIII. ISBN 978-0-19-540464-7.
  43. ^ Vancouver Art Gallery, Chronology July 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ National Historic Person
  45. ^ Governor General's Award
  46. ^ Shadbolt (1990), p. 182.
  47. ^ a b Moray, Gerta (1999). ""T'Other Emily:" Emily Carr, the Modern Woman Artist and Dilemmas of Gender". RACAR: Revue d'art canadienne / Canadian Art Review. 26 (1/2): 73–90. doi:10.7202/1071551ar. ISSN 0315-9906. JSTOR 42630612.
  48. ^ Tippett, Maria (1974). "Emily Carr's Forest". Journal of Forest History. 18 (4): 133–137. doi:10.2307/3983325. ISSN 0094-5080. JSTOR 3983325. S2CID 163289654.
  49. ^ Thacker, Robert (1999). "Being on the Northwest Coast: Emily Carr, Cascadian". The Pacific Northwest Quarterly. 90 (4): 182–190. ISSN 0030-8803. JSTOR 40492516.
  50. ^ Shadbolt (1990), p. 70.
  51. ^ Vancouver Art Gallery, Technical Practices July 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  52. ^ Tiampo, Ming (2022). Jin-me Yoon: Life & Work. Toronto: Art Canada Institute. ISBN 978-1-4871-0297-5.
  53. ^ Carr, Emily (1972). Fresh Seeing. Toronto: Clarke, Irwin and Company. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  54. ^ Carr, Emily (2005). Growing Pains. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  55. ^ Carr, Emily (2006), Hundreds and Thousands: The Journals of Emily Carr, Douglas & McIntyre, ISBN 978-1-55365-172-7
  56. ^ Carr, Emily (2004). Klee Wyck. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  57. ^ Carr, Emily (2007). Pause: A Sketchbook. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  58. ^ Carr, Emily (2004). The Book of Small. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  59. ^ Carr, Emily (2005). The Heart of a Peacock. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  60. ^ Carr, Emily (2004). The House of All Sorts. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  61. ^ Carr, Emily (2011). Bridge, Kathryn (ed.). Sister and I from Victoria to London. Victoria, BC: Royal BC Museum. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  62. ^ Carr, Emily (2006). Wildflowers. Victoria, BC: Royal BC Museum. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  63. ^ Opposite Contraries. The Unknown Journals of Emily Carr and other writings. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. 2003. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  64. ^ Corresponding Influence. Selected Letters of Emily Carr & Ira Dilworth. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 2006. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  65. ^ Sister & I in Alaska. Vancouver: Figure 1. 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  66. ^ This and That. The Lost Stories of Emily Carr. Victoria, BC: Touchwood Editions. 2007. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  67. ^ Letters of Emily Carr, Nan Cheney and Humphrey Toms. Vancouver: UBC Press. 1990. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  68. ^ Baldisera, Lisa. Emily Carr: Life and Work. Art Institute. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  69. ^ Emily Carr in England. Victoria, BC: Royal BC Museum. 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  70. ^ Hembroff-Schleicher, Edythe (1978). Emily Carr: The Untold Story. Saanichton: Hancock House. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  71. ^ Shadbolt, Doris (1979). The Art of Emily Carr. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre and Clarke Irwin. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  72. ^ Shadbolt, Doris (1990). Emily Carr. Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  73. ^ Shadbolt, Doris (2002). Seven Journeys: The Sketchbooks of Emily Carr. Douglas & McIntyre.
  74. ^ "Emily Carr: New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon". library.gallery.ca. Vancouver Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  75. ^ Tippett, Maria (1979). Emily Carr. A Biography. Toronto: Oxford University Press. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  76. ^ Lacroix, Laurier (2010). "Writing art history in the Twentieth Century". The Visual Arts in Canada in the Twentieth Century. Canada: Oxford. p. 419. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
  77. ^ . National Gallery of Canada at the Venice Biennale. National Gallery of Canada. Archived from the original on October 13, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  78. ^ "Big Raven". Canadian Postal Archives Database. February 12, 1971. Archived from the original on January 1, 2013. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  79. ^ "Forest". Canadian Postal Archives Database. May 7, 1991. Archived from the original on January 1, 2013. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  80. ^ McMann, Evelyn (1981). . Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Archived from the original on October 11, 2022. Retrieved June 2, 2022.
  81. ^ "First European solo show of one of Canada's best-loved artists" (Press release). Dulwich Picture Gallery. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  82. ^ "Emily Carr: Fresh Seeing French Modernism and the West Coast/". royalbcmuseum.bc.ca. Royal BC Museum. Retrieved November 18, 2021.
  83. ^ Slaughter, Graham (November 28, 2013). "Emily Carr painting sells for $3 million at Toronto auction". Toronto Star. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  84. ^ "Highlights". cowleyabbott.ca. Cowley Abbott Auction. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  85. ^ "Works". cowleyabbott.ca. Cowley Abbott Auction. Retrieved December 7, 2023.
  86. ^ Emily Carr House. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  87. ^ "Emily Carr, the Artist". Emily Carr University of Art + Design. June 19, 2015. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  88. ^ "Emily Carr Branch". Greater Victoria Public Library. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  89. ^ . Emily Carr Elementary School. Vancouver School Board. Archived from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  90. ^ "Our School". Emily Carr MS. Ottawa–Carleton District School Board. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  91. ^ "Emily Carr – The Artist". Emily Carr Public School. Thames Valley District School Board. October 4, 2018. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  92. ^ "School History". Emily Carr Public School. Toronto District School Board. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  93. ^ "School Information". Emily Carr PS. Halton District School Board. from the original on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  94. ^ Planetary Gazetteer
  95. ^ "Emily Carr Inlet". BC Geographical Names.
  96. ^ "Finding aid to Emily Carr fonds at Library and Archives Canada" (PDF). Retrieved July 31, 2020.
  97. ^ "Emily Carr fonds description at Library and Archives Canada". Retrieved July 31, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  98. ^ "Emily Carr fonds at Heritage Canada". Retrieved July 31, 2020.

Cited sources edit

  • Bridge, Kathryn Anne (2014). Emily Carr in England. Victoria, Canada: Royal BC Museum. ISBN 9780772667700.
  • Shadbolt, Doris (1990). Emily Carr. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 9780295970035.

Further reading edit

  • Hill, Charles C.; Lamoureaux, Johanne; Thom, Ian M. (2006). Emily Carr New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon. Vancouver: Douglas & Mcintyre. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  • Berdjis-Kamraanpour, Hedye (2018). Understanding Emily Carr: A Look at the Fashioning of an Autonomous Self. l: McGill University, unpublished thesis. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  • Burns, Flora Hamilton (1966). "Emily Carr". M. Q. Innis, ed. Clear Spirit-Twenty Canadian Women and Their Times. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  • Coburn, Kathleen. "Emily Carr: In Memoriam", The Canadian Forum, vol. 25 (April 1945): 24.
    • "Canadian Forum periodical on microfilm". ago.ent.sirsidynix.net. Art Gallery of Ontario. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  • Moray, Greta (2006). Unsettling Encounters: First Nations Imagery in the Art of Emily Carr. Vancouver: UBC Press. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  • Watanabe, Kiriko; Bridge, Kathryn (2019). Emily Carr: Fresh Seeing – French Modernism and the West Coast. Vancouver: Emily Carr: Fresh Seeing – French Modernism and the West Coast. Retrieved December 4, 2023.

External links edit

emily, carr, december, 1871, march, 1945, canadian, artist, inspired, monumental, villages, first, nations, landscapes, british, columbia, also, vivid, writer, chronicler, life, surroundings, praised, complete, candour, strong, prose, klee, wyck, first, book, . Emily Carr December 13 1871 March 2 1945 was a Canadian artist who was inspired by the monumental art and villages of the First Nations and the landscapes of British Columbia 1 She also was a vivid writer and chronicler of life in her surroundings praised for her complete candour and strong prose 2 Klee Wyck her first book published in 1941 won the Governor General s Literary Award for non fiction 3 and this book and others written by her or compiled from her writings later are still much in demand today Emily CarrCarr in 1888BornMillie Emily Carr 1871 12 13 December 13 1871Victoria British Columbia CanadaDiedMarch 2 1945 1945 03 02 aged 73 Victoria British Columbia CanadaEducationSan Francisco Art InstituteWestminster School of ArtAcademie ColarossiKnown forPainting The Indian Church Big Raven writing Klee Wyck MovementPost ImpressionismCarr s keynote paintings such as The Indian Church 1929 were not widely known in Canada at first But her stature as one of Canada s most important artists continued to grow Today she is considered a cherished figure of Canadian arts and letters 4 Scholars and the public alike regard her as a Canadian national treasure 5 and the Canadian Encyclopedia describes her as a Canadian icon 6 She has been designated a National Historic Person 7 and had a Minor planet 5688 Kleewyck named after her anglicized native name 8 4 5 As one scholar in her 2014 book on Carr put it we love her and she continues to speak to us 9 Emily Carr lived most of her life in the city in which she was born and died Victoria British Columbia Contents 1 Early life 2 First works on Indigenous people 3 Work in France 4 Return to Canada 5 Growing recognition 6 Association with the Group of Seven 7 Influence of the Pacific Northwest school 8 Later developments 9 Shift of focus and late life 10 Work 10 1 Painting 11 Legacy 12 Writings by Carr 13 Writing by Carr edited by other authors 14 Biographies of Emily Carr 15 Recognition 16 Record sale prices 17 Institutions named for Carr 18 Archives 19 See also 20 References 20 1 Cited sources 21 Further reading 22 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Emily Carr House 207 Government Street Victoria now a National Historic Site of Canada and a museumBorn in Victoria British Columbia in 1871 10 11 12 the year British Columbia joined Canada Emily Carr was the second youngest of nine children born to English parents Richard and Emily Saunders Carr 13 14 The Carr home was on Birdcage Walk now Government Street in the James Bay district of Victoria a short distance from the legislative buildings nicknamed the Birdcages and the town itself Today it is a museum and National Historic Site of Canada called Emily Carr House The Carr children were raised in an English tradition Her father believed it was sensible to live on Vancouver Island a colony of Great Britain where he could practice English customs and continue his British citizenship The family home was made up in lavish English fashion with high ceilings ornate moldings and a parlour 15 Carr was taught in the Presbyterian tradition with Sunday morning prayers and evening Bible readings Her father called on one child per week to recite the sermon and Emily consistently had trouble reciting it 16 Carr s mother died in 1886 and her father died in 1888 17 Her oldest sister Edith Carr became the guardian of the rest of the children 18 12 Carr s father encouraged her artistic inclinations but it was only in 1890 after her parents deaths that Carr pursued her art seriously She studied at the California School of Design in San Francisco for three years 1890 1893 before returning to Victoria In 1899 Carr visited Ucluelet on the west coast of Vancouver Island 17 That same year Carr traveled to London where she decided to transform herself into a professional artist and to make it her life s calling 19 She began her studies at the Westminster School of Art 4 She then took art classes from John William Whiteley in Bushey Hertfordshire and afterwards traveled to an art colony in St Ives Cornwall studying with Julius Olsson and Algernon Talmage 1901 In 1902 she returned to Bushey and studied with Whiteley till she experienced a nervous breakdown and had to convalesce She returned to British Columbia in 1904 In 1905 she gave children s art classes as well as creating political cartoons for the Week a newspaper in Victoria 5 and in 1906 Carr took a teaching position in Vancouver at the Vancouver Studio Club and School of Art for a short time she was a popular teacher but left to open her own studio and give children s art classes 4 First works on Indigenous people editIn 1898 at age 27 Carr made the first of several sketching and painting trips to Aboriginal villages 20 She stayed in a village near Ucluelet on the west coast of Vancouver Island home to the Nuu chah nulth people then commonly known to English speaking people as Nootka 20 Carr was given the Indigenous name of Klee Wyck and she also chose it as the title of her first book 21 She later recalled that her time in Ucluelet made a lasting impression on me 20 In 1907 Carr made a sightseeing trip to Alaska with her sister Alice and decided on her artistic mission of documenting all she could of what she and many others perceived as the vanishing totems and way of life of the First Nations 4 She may have met an American artist on this trip likely Theodore J Richardson 1855 1914 who described his project of documenting Indigenous art and architecture he travelled with Indigenous guides to produce watercolours and pastels in southeast Alaska documenting the Tlingit culture and that possibly this encounter inspired Carr to initiate her own five year project of documenting Indigenous villages and their neighbouring forests in British Columbia 22 5 From 1908 to 1910 she made several trips to First Nations communities to record art and villages 5 Work in France editDetermined to further her knowledge of evolving artistic trends abroad in 1910 Carr returned to Europe to study In Montparnasse with her sister Alice Emily Carr met modernist painter Harry Phelan Gibb with a letter of introduction 23 Upon viewing his work she and her sister were shocked and intrigued 24 by his use of distortion and vibrant colour she wrote Mr Gibb s landscapes and still life delighted me brilliant luscious clean Against the distortion of his nudes I felt revolt 23 Carr enrolled at the Academie Colarossi in Paris then transferred to private lessons with John Duncan Fergusson and followed him to the Atelier Blanche After a bout of illness she joined Gibb and his wife in the small village of Crecy en Brie and then St Efflam Brittany Carr s study with Gibb and his techniques shaped and influenced her style of painting and she adopted a vibrant colour palette rather than continuing with the more modified colours of her earlier training 25 nbsp Emily Carr Breton church oil on canvas 1906In Crecy en Brie she fully embraced the Fauve style of bold colour and broad brushwork then traveled to Concarneau on the coast of Brittany to study with Frances Hodgkins When she returned to Paris she found that two of her paintings had been selected by the jury and hung in the 1911 Salon d Automne 4 Return to Canada edit nbsp Emily Carr 1930In March 1912 Carr opened a studio at 1465 West Broadway in Vancouver She organized an exhibition of seventy watercolours and oils representative of her time in France using her radical new style bold colour palette and lack of detail 4 She was the first artist to introduce Post Impressionism to Vancouver 22 Later in 1912 Carr took a sketching trip to First Nations villages in Haida Gwaii formerly the Queen Charlotte Islands the Upper Skeena River and Alert Bay 4 26 where she documented the art of the Haida Gitxsan and Tsimshian At Cumshewa a Haida village on Moresby Island she wrote in Klee Wyck Cumshewa seems always to drip always to be blurred with mist its foliage always to hang wet heavy these strong young trees grew up round the dilapidated old raven sheltering him from the tearing winds now that he was old and rotting the memory of Cumshewa is of a great lonesomeness smothered in a blur of rain Carr painted a carved raven which she later developed as her iconic painting Big Raven Tanoo another painting inspired by work gathered on this trip depicts three totems before house fronts at the village of the same name On her return to the south Carr organized a large exhibition of some of this work She gave a detailed public talk titled Lecture on Totem Poles about the Aboriginal villages that she had visited which ended with her mission statement I glory in our wonderful west and I hope to leave behind me some of the relics of its first primitive greatness These things should be to us Canadians what the ancient Briton s relics are to the English Only a few more years and they will be gone forever into silent nothingness and I would gather my collection together before they are forever past 27 Her Lecture on Totems at Dominion Hall in Vancouver is in the Emily Carr Papers at the British Columbia Provincial Archives in Victoria 28 In the lecture she said every pole shown in my collection has been studied from its own actual reality While there was some positive reaction to her work even in the new French style 29 Carr perceived that Vancouver s reaction to her work and new style was not positive enough to support her career She recounted as much in her book Growing Pains She was determined to give up teaching and working in Vancouver and in 1913 she returned to Victoria where several of her sisters still lived 23 During the next 15 years Carr did little painting She ran a boarding house known as the House of All Sorts It was the namesake and provided source material for her later book With her financial circumstances straitened and her life in Victoria circumscribed Carr painted a few works in this period drawn from local scenes the cliffs at Dallas Road the trees in Beacon Hill Park Her own assessment of the period was that she had ceased to paint which was not strictly true although a rt had ceased to be the primary drive of her life 30 nbsp Emily Carr Kitwancool 1928Growing recognition editOver time Carr s work came to the attention of several influential and supportive people including through the intervention of Victoria born artist Sophie Pemberton in 1921 Harold Mortimer Lamb and Marius Barbeau a prominent ethnologist at the National Museum in Ottawa Barbeau in turn persuaded Eric Brown Director of Canada s National Gallery to visit Carr in 1927 31 Brown invited Carr to exhibit her work at the National Gallery as part of an exhibition on West Coast art Carr sent 65 oil paintings east 31 were included 4 along with samples of her pottery and rugs with Indigenous designs 32 The exhibition which was largely of First Nations art included works by Edwin Holgate and A Y Jackson as well as Carr traveled to Toronto and Montreal Association with the Group of Seven edit nbsp Carr s The Indian Church 1929 Lawren Harris bought the painting and showcased it in his home He considered it Carr s best work It was controversially retitled in 2018 by the Art Gallery of Ontario to Church at Yuquot VillageCarr made the trip east for the exhibition on West Coast art Native and modern at the National Gallery of Canada in 1927 She met Frederick Varley in Vancouver and other members of the Group of Seven at that time Canada s most recognized modern painters 17 at the show s Toronto venue 4 Lawren Harris of the Group became an important mentor and friend You are one of us he told Carr welcoming her into the ranks of Canada s leading modernists and along with other members of the Group into the Group of Seven shows as an invited contributor in 1930 and 1931 22 Her encounter with the Group ended the artistic isolation of Carr s previous 15 years leading to one of her most prolific periods and the creation of many of her most notable works Through her extensive correspondence with Harris Carr also became aware of and studied Northern European symbolism 33 Carr s artistic direction was influenced by Harris s work and the advice he gave in his correspondence he told her to seek an equivalent for the totem poles in west coast landscape for instance 34 but also by his belief in Theosophy 17 She was deeply interested and struggled to reconcile this with her own conception of God 35 Carr s distrust for institutional religion pervades much of her art 36 She thought a great deal about Theosophic thought like many artists of the time but in the end remained unconvinced 36 37 Influence of the Pacific Northwest school editIn 1924 and 1925 Carr exhibited at the Artists of the Pacific Northwest shows in Seattle Washington She invited fellow exhibitor Mark Tobey to visit her in Victoria in the autumn of 1928 to teach a master class in her studio Working with Tobey Carr furthered her understanding of modern art experimenting with Tobey s methods of full on abstraction and Cubism but she was reluctant to follow Tobey beyond the legacy of Cubism 33 38 39 I was not ready for abstraction I clung to earth and her dear shapes her density her herbage her juice I wanted her volume and I wanted to hear her throb 40 Although Carr expressed reluctance about abstraction Doris Shadbolt at the Vancouver Art Gallery a major curator of Carr s work records Carr in this period as abandoning the documentary impulse and starting to concentrate instead on capturing the emotional and mythological content embedded in the totemic carvings She jettisoned her painterly and practiced Post Impressionist style in favour of creating highly stylized and abstracted geometric forms 38 Later developments edit nbsp Odds and Ends 1939Carr continued to travel throughout the late 1920s and 1930s away from Victoria One of her last trips north was in the summer of 1928 when she visited the Nass and Skeena rivers as well as Haida Gwaii formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands She went to Yuquot also known as Friendly Cove and the northeast coast of Vancouver Island in 1930 and then to Lillooet in 1933 4 In the same year she bought a caravan she nicknamed the Elephant and had it towed to places she wanted to paint going to nearby locations such as Goldstream Flats the Esquimalt Lagoon and elsewhere 37 Recognition of her work grew steadily and in 1930 she exhibited in Ottawa Victoria and Seattle and in 1935 Carr s first solo show of her oil on paper works was held in eastern Canada at the Women s Art Association of Canada gallery in Toronto 41 In 1938 she had her first annual solo exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery as well as success at the Tate Gallery in London England 4 Other shows abroad followed 42 She began to meet other artists In 1930 for instance Carr travelled to New York and met Georgia O Keefe 4 In 1933 she was a founding member of the Canadian Group of Painters 4 Paintings from Carr s last decade reveal her growing anxiety about the environmental impact of industry on British Columbia s landscape Her work from this time reflected her growing concern over industrial logging its ecological effects and its encroachment on the lives of Indigenous people In her painting Odds and Ends from 1939 the cleared land and tree stumps shift the focus from the majestic forestscapes that lured European and American tourists to the West Coast to reveal instead the impact of deforestation 22 Shift of focus and late life editCarr suffered her first heart attack in 1937 and another in 1939 forcing her to move in with her sister Alice to recover In 1940 Carr suffered serious trouble with her heart and in 1942 she had another heart attack 43 With her ability to travel curtailed Carr s focus shifted from her painting to her writing The editorial assistance of Carr s great friend and literary advisor Ira Dilworth 19 a professor of English enabled Carr to see her own first book Klee Wyck published in 1941 17 Carr was awarded the Governor General s Literary Award for non fiction the same year for the work 44 45 In 1942 Carr established the Emily Carr Trust and donated close to 170 paintings to the Vancouver Art Gallery She suffered her last heart attack and died on March 2 1945 at the James Bay Inn in her hometown of Victoria British Columbia shortly before she was to have been awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of British Columbia 46 Carr is buried at Ross Bay Cemetery Work editPainting edit nbsp Autumn in France 1911 National Gallery of Canada nbsp Among the Firs c 1931 Glenbow Museum Calgary nbsp Above the Gravel Pit 1937Carr is remembered primarily for her painting She was one of the artists who attempted to capture the spirit of Canada in a modern style Carr s main themes in her mature work were the monumental works of the First Nations and nature native totem poles set in deep forest locations or sites of abandoned native villages and later the large rhythms of Western forests driftwood tossed beaches and expansive skies 6 She blended these two themes in ways uniquely her own Her qualities of painterly skill and vision enabled her to give form to a Pacific mythos that was so carefully distilled in her imagination 6 At the California School of Design in San Francisco Carr participated in art classes which were focused on a variety of artistic styles Many of Carr s art professors were trained in the Beaux Arts tradition in Paris France Though she took classes in drawing portraiture still life landscape painting and flower painting Carr preferred to paint landscapes 47 Carr is known for her paintings of First Nations villages and Pacific Northwest Indian totems but Maria Tippett explains that Carr s depictions of the forests of British Columbia from within make her work unique 48 Carr constructed a new understanding of Cascadia This understanding includes a new approach to the presentation of native people and Canadian landscapes 49 After visiting the Gitksan village of Kitwancool in the summer of 1928 Carr became captivated by the maternal imagery in Pacific Northwest Indigenous totem poles After Carr was exposed to these types of images her paintings reflected these images of mother and child in Native carvings 47 Her painting can be divided into several distinct phases her early work before her studies in Paris her early paintings under the Fauvist influence of her time in Paris a Post Impressionist middle period 30 before her encounter with the Group of Seven and her later formal period under the cubist and post cubist influences of Lawren Harris and American artist and friend Mark Tobey 50 Carr used charcoal and watercolour for her sketches and beginning in 1932 house paint thinned with gasoline on manila paper 51 The greatest part of her mature work was oil on canvas or when money was scarce oil on paper Legacy editCarr s work is still of relevance today to contemporary artists Her painting Old Time Coast Village 1929 30 is referred to in Korean Canadian artist Jin me Yoon s A Group of Sixty Seven 1996 The work is composed of sixty seven portraits of the Korean Canadian community in Vancouver standing in front of Old Time Coast Village and a landscape painting by Group of Seven member Lawren Harris 52 Writings by Carr editFresh Seeing Clarke Irwin and Company 1972 53 Growing Pains Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2005 54 Hundreds and Thousands The Journals of Emily Carr Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2006 55 Klee Wyck Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2004 56 Pause A Sketchbook Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2007 57 The Book of Small Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2004 58 The Heart of a Peacock Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2005 59 The House of All Sorts Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2004 60 Writing by Carr edited by other authors editBridge Kathryn ed Sister amp I From Victoria to London Victoria Royal BC Museum 2011 61 Bridge Kathryn ed Wildflowers Victoria Royal BC Museum 2000 62 Crean Susan ed Opposite Contraries The Unknown Journals of Emily Carr and other writings Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2003 63 Morra Linda ed Corresponding Influence Selected Letters of Emily Carr amp Ira Dilworth Toronto University of Toronto Press 2006 64 Silcox David P ed Sister amp I in Alaska Vancouver Figure 1 2014 65 Switzer Ann Lee ed This and That The Lost Stories of Emily Carr Victoria Touchwood Editions 2007 66 Walker Doreen ed Dear Nan Letters of Emily Carr Nan Cheney and Humphrey Toms Vancouver UBC Press 1990 67 Biographies of Emily Carr editBaldiserra Lisa Emily Carr Life and Times Art Canada Institute 68 Bridge Kathryn ed Emily Carr in England Victoria Royal BC Museum 2014 69 Hembroff Schleicher Edythe Emily Carr The Untold Story Saanichton Hancock House 1978 70 Shadbolt Doris The Art of Emily Carr Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre and Clarke Irwin 1979 71 Shadbolt Doris Emily Carr Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 1990 72 Shadbolt Doris Seven Journeys The Sketchbooks of Emily Carr Douglas amp McIntyre 2002 73 Thom Ian M and Charles Hill ed Emily Carr New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon Vancouver and Ottawa Vancouver Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Canada 2006 74 Tippett Maria Emily Carr A Biography Toronto Oxford University Press 1979 75 Recognition edit nbsp Blunden Harbour 1930 National Gallery of CanadaCarr s life itself made her a Canadian icon according to the Canadian Encyclopedia 6 As well as being an artist of stunning originality and strength she was an exceptionally late bloomer starting the work for which she is best known at the age of 57 see Grandma Moses Carr was also an artist who succeeded against the odds living in an artistically unadventurous society and working mostly in seclusion away from major art centres thus making her a darling of the women s movement like Georgia O Keeffe whom she met in 1930 in New York City 6 Emily Carr brought the north to the south the west to the east glimpses of the ancient culture of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas to the most newly arrived Europeans on the continent However art historians who write about Carr in depth often respond to their particular points of view Feminist studies Sharyn R Udall 2000 First Nations scholarship Gerta Moray 2006 or the critical study of what an artist says as a tool to analyze the work itself Charles C Hill Ian M Thom 2006 76 In 1952 works by Emily Carr along with those of David Milne Goodridge Roberts and Alfred Pellan represented Canada at the Venice Biennale 77 nbsp 1971 Canada stamp honoring Emily Carr based on her painting Big RavenOn February 12 1971 Canada Post issued a 6 stamp Emily Carr painter 1871 1945 designed by William Rueter based on Carr s Big Raven 1931 held by the Vancouver Art Gallery 78 On May 7 1991 Canada Post issued a 50 stamp Forest British Columbia Emily Carr 1931 1932 designed by Pierre Yves Pelletier based on Forest British Columbia 1931 1932 also from the Vancouver Art Gallery collection 79 In 1978 she was awarded the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Medal 80 In 2014 2015 the Dulwich Picture Gallery in south London hosted a solo exhibition the first time such show was held in Britain 81 In 2020 a travelling exhibition organized by the Audain Art Museum in Whistler B C and co curated by Kiriko Watanabe and Dr Kathryn Bridge and titled Emily Carr Fresh Seeing French Modernism and the West Coast explored this aspect of Carr s work in detail 82 Record sale prices editOn November 28 2013 one of Carr s paintings The Crazy Stair The Crooked Staircase sold for 3 39 million at Heffel s live auction in Toronto 83 As of the sale it is a record price for a painting by a Canadian female artist At the Cowley Abbott Auction in Toronto December 1 2022 Carr s The Totem of the Bear and the Moon 1912 oil on canvas 37 x 17 75 ins 94 x 45 1 cms Auction Estimate 2 000 000 00 3 000 000 00 sold for 3 120 000 00 84 At the Cowley Abbott Auction of An Important Private Collection of Canadian Art December 6 2023 lot 129 Carr s Nirvana oil on paper mounted on canvas 35 25 x 20 25 ins 89 5 x 51 4 cm Auction Estimate 250 000 00 350 000 00 realized a price of 744 000 00 85 Institutions named for Carr edit nbsp Emily Carr s gravestone Ross Bay cemeteryEmily Carr House in Victoria British Columbia 86 Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver British Columbia 87 Emily Carr Public Library in Victoria British Columbia 88 Emily Carr Secondary School in Woodbridge Ontario citation needed Emily Carr Elementary School in Vancouver British Columbia 89 Emily Carr Middle School in Ottawa Ontario 90 Emily Carr public schools in London 91 Toronto Ontario 92 Emily Carr public school in Oakville Ontario 93 In 1994 the Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature of the International Astronomical Union adopted the name Carr for a crater on Venus The Carr crater has an approximate diameter of 31 9 kilometers 94 Emily Carr Inlet an arm of Chapple Inlet on the North Coast of British Columbia 95 Archives editThe British Columbia Archives holds the largest collection of Emily Carr artworks sketches and archival materials which includes the Emily Carr fonds the Emily Carr Art Collection and a wealth of archival documents held in the fonds of Carr s friends There is an Emily Carr fonds at Library and Archives Canada 96 The archival reference number is R1969 former archival reference number MG30 D215 97 The fonds covers the date range 1891 to 1991 It consists of 1 764 meters of textual records 10 photographs 1 print 7 drawings A number of the records have been digitized and are available online 98 Library and Archives Canada also holds a number of other fonds containing material that touch on Emily Carr and her artistic works See also editModern art List of Canadian artistsReferences edit Morra Linda M 2005 Canadian Art According to Emily Carr Canadian Literature 185 43 57 ISSN 0008 4360 Archived from the original on February 3 2017 Retrieved March 19 2017 Kathleen Coburn Emily Carr In Memoriam Canadian Forum vol 25 April 1945 p 24 Governor General s Literary Award ggbooks ca Governor General of Canada Retrieved December 5 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Emily Carr Timeline royalbcmuseum bc ca Royal BC Museum Retrieved December 5 2023 a b c d e Carr Emily 2021 Unvarnished Emily Carr Autobiographical Sketches by Emily Carr edited by Dr Kathryn Bridge Preface Victoria Royal BC Museum Retrieved December 5 2023 a b c d e Shadbolt June 23 2013 Emily Carr Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved July 21 2015 Carr Emily National Historic Person www pc gc ca Gov t of Canada Retrieved December 5 2023 5688 Kleewyck In Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Springer 2003 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 5383 ISBN 978 3 540 29925 7 Bridge 2014 p 8 MacKenzie Lily Iona July 3 2019 Emily Carr An Artist s Evolution December 13 1871 March 2 1945 Jung Journal 13 3 119 134 doi 10 1080 19342039 2019 1637187 ISSN 1934 2039 S2CID 203303364 Great women artists Phaidon Press 2019 p 88 ISBN 978 0 7148 7877 5 a b Emily Carr CWRC CSEC cwrc ca Retrieved March 28 2023 BC Heritage Vancouver Art Gallery Kate Braid Emily Carr Rebel Artist Toronto Ontario XYZ Editeur 2000 p 13 Braid 2000 pp 15 16 a b c d e Walker Stephanie Kirkwood This woman in particular contexts for the biographical image of Emily Carr Waterloo Ontario ISBN 978 0 88920 565 9 OCLC 923765615 Emily s Siblings BC Heritage May 26 2013 Archived from the original on May 26 2013 Retrieved March 10 2019 a b Bridge 2014 p 9 a b c Tippett Maria 1979 Emily Carr A Biography Toronto Oxford University Press pp 49 50 Stewart Janice 2005 Cultural Appropriations and Identificatory Practices in Emily Carr s Indian Stories Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 26 2 59 72 doi 10 1353 fro 2005 0030 ISSN 0160 9009 JSTOR 4137396 S2CID 143814184 a b c d Baldissera Lisa 2015 Emily Carr Life amp Work PDF Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0044 5 Archived from the original PDF on October 7 2015 p 36 a b c Carr Emily 2005 Growing pains the autobiography of Emily Carr foreword by Ira Dilworth introduction by Robin Laurence Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 6 2023 Braid 2000 pp 61 63 Braid 2000 p 66 Vancouver Art Gallery Early totems Archived July 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine Shadbolt Doris 1979 The Art of Emily Carr Toronto Ontario Douglas amp McIntyre and Clarke Irwin amp Company p 38 Retrieved December 5 2023 Emily Carr Art Canada Institute Institut de l art canadien Retrieved February 28 2022 Shadbolt 1990 p 40 a b Shadbolt 1990 p 42 Shadbolt 1990 p 52 Shadbolt 1990 p 53 a b Vancouver Art Gallery Artistic Context Archived July 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine Emily Carr To the Totem Forests Introduction www emilycarr org AGGV Retrieved January 7 2024 Shadbolt 1990 p 58 a b Walker Stephanie Kirkwood 1996 This Woman in Particular Contexts for the Biographical Image of Emily Carr Waterloo Ontario Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 0 88920 263 4 a b Carr Emily 2021 Unvarnished Emily Carr Autobiographical Sketches by Emily Carr edited by Dr Kathryn Bridge Victoria BC Royal BC Museum p 113 Retrieved December 10 2023 a b Vancouver Art Gallery Modernism and Late Totems Archived July 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine Ruth Stevens Appelhof The Expressionist Landscape North American Modernist Painting 1920 1947 Birmingham Museum of Art 1988 p 60 Carr 2005 p 457 Holmlund Mona Youngberg Gail 2003 Inspiring Women A Celebration of Herstory Coteau Books p 216 ISBN 978 1 55050 204 6 Breuer Michael Dodd Kerry Mason 1984 Sunlight in the Shadows The Landscape of Emily Carr Toronto Oxford University Press p VIII ISBN 978 0 19 540464 7 Vancouver Art Gallery Chronology Archived July 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Historic Person Governor General s Award Shadbolt 1990 p 182 a b Moray Gerta 1999 T Other Emily Emily Carr the Modern Woman Artist and Dilemmas of Gender RACAR Revue d art canadienne Canadian Art Review 26 1 2 73 90 doi 10 7202 1071551ar ISSN 0315 9906 JSTOR 42630612 Tippett Maria 1974 Emily Carr s Forest Journal of Forest History 18 4 133 137 doi 10 2307 3983325 ISSN 0094 5080 JSTOR 3983325 S2CID 163289654 Thacker Robert 1999 Being on the Northwest Coast Emily Carr Cascadian The Pacific Northwest Quarterly 90 4 182 190 ISSN 0030 8803 JSTOR 40492516 Shadbolt 1990 p 70 Vancouver Art Gallery Technical Practices Archived July 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine Tiampo Ming 2022 Jin me Yoon Life amp Work Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0297 5 Carr Emily 1972 Fresh Seeing Toronto Clarke Irwin and Company Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2005 Growing Pains Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2006 Hundreds and Thousands The Journals of Emily Carr Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 978 1 55365 172 7 Carr Emily 2004 Klee Wyck Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2007 Pause A Sketchbook Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2004 The Book of Small Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2005 The Heart of a Peacock Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2004 The House of All Sorts Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2011 Bridge Kathryn ed Sister and I from Victoria to London Victoria BC Royal BC Museum Retrieved December 4 2023 Carr Emily 2006 Wildflowers Victoria BC Royal BC Museum Retrieved December 4 2023 Opposite Contraries The Unknown Journals of Emily Carr and other writings Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 2003 Retrieved December 4 2023 Corresponding Influence Selected Letters of Emily Carr amp Ira Dilworth Toronto University of Toronto Press 2006 Retrieved December 4 2023 Sister amp I in Alaska Vancouver Figure 1 2014 Retrieved December 4 2023 This and That The Lost Stories of Emily Carr Victoria BC Touchwood Editions 2007 Retrieved December 4 2023 Letters of Emily Carr Nan Cheney and Humphrey Toms Vancouver UBC Press 1990 Retrieved December 4 2023 Baldisera Lisa Emily Carr Life and Work Art Institute Retrieved December 18 2023 Emily Carr in England Victoria BC Royal BC Museum 2014 Retrieved December 4 2023 Hembroff Schleicher Edythe 1978 Emily Carr The Untold Story Saanichton Hancock House Retrieved December 4 2023 Shadbolt Doris 1979 The Art of Emily Carr Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre and Clarke Irwin Retrieved December 18 2023 Shadbolt Doris 1990 Emily Carr Vancouver Vancouver Art Gallery Retrieved December 18 2023 Shadbolt Doris 2002 Seven Journeys The Sketchbooks of Emily Carr Douglas amp McIntyre Emily Carr New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon library gallery ca Vancouver Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Canada Retrieved December 18 2023 Tippett Maria 1979 Emily Carr A Biography Toronto Oxford University Press Retrieved December 4 2023 Lacroix Laurier 2010 Writing art history in the Twentieth Century The Visual Arts in Canada in the Twentieth Century Canada Oxford p 419 Retrieved November 24 2020 Past Canadian Exhibitions National Gallery of Canada at the Venice Biennale National Gallery of Canada Archived from the original on October 13 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 Big Raven Canadian Postal Archives Database February 12 1971 Archived from the original on January 1 2013 Retrieved July 22 2015 Forest Canadian Postal Archives Database May 7 1991 Archived from the original on January 1 2013 Retrieved July 22 2015 McMann Evelyn 1981 Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Toronto University of Toronto Press Archived from the original on October 11 2022 Retrieved June 2 2022 First European solo show of one of Canada s best loved artists Press release Dulwich Picture Gallery Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 Emily Carr Fresh Seeing French Modernism and the West Coast royalbcmuseum bc ca Royal BC Museum Retrieved November 18 2021 Slaughter Graham November 28 2013 Emily Carr painting sells for 3 million at Toronto auction Toronto Star Retrieved July 21 2015 Highlights cowleyabbott ca Cowley Abbott Auction Retrieved January 8 2023 Works cowleyabbott ca Cowley Abbott Auction Retrieved December 7 2023 Emily Carr House Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved November 13 2011 Emily Carr the Artist Emily Carr University of Art Design June 19 2015 Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 Emily Carr Branch Greater Victoria Public Library Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 About Us Emily Carr Elementary School Vancouver School Board Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 Our School Emily Carr MS Ottawa Carleton District School Board Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 Emily Carr The Artist Emily Carr Public School Thames Valley District School Board October 4 2018 Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 School History Emily Carr Public School Toronto District School Board Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 School Information Emily Carr PS Halton District School Board Archived from the original on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2018 Planetary Gazetteer Emily Carr Inlet BC Geographical Names Finding aid to Emily Carr fonds at Library and Archives Canada PDF Retrieved July 31 2020 Emily Carr fonds description at Library and Archives Canada Retrieved July 31 2020 permanent dead link Emily Carr fonds at Heritage Canada Retrieved July 31 2020 Cited sources edit Bridge Kathryn Anne 2014 Emily Carr in England Victoria Canada Royal BC Museum ISBN 9780772667700 Shadbolt Doris 1990 Emily Carr Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 9780295970035 Further reading editHill Charles C Lamoureaux Johanne Thom Ian M 2006 Emily Carr New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon Vancouver Douglas amp Mcintyre Retrieved December 4 2023 Berdjis Kamraanpour Hedye 2018 Understanding Emily Carr A Look at the Fashioning of an Autonomous Self l McGill University unpublished thesis Retrieved December 4 2023 Burns Flora Hamilton 1966 Emily Carr M Q Innis ed Clear Spirit Twenty Canadian Women and Their Times Toronto University of Toronto Press Retrieved December 4 2023 Coburn Kathleen Emily Carr In Memoriam The Canadian Forum vol 25 April 1945 24 Canadian Forum periodical on microfilm ago ent sirsidynix net Art Gallery of Ontario Retrieved December 5 2023 Moray Greta 2006 Unsettling Encounters First Nations Imagery in the Art of Emily Carr Vancouver UBC Press Retrieved December 4 2023 Watanabe Kiriko Bridge Kathryn 2019 Emily Carr Fresh Seeing French Modernism and the West Coast Vancouver Emily Carr Fresh Seeing French Modernism and the West Coast Retrieved December 4 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Emily Carr https royalbcmuseum bc ca visit exhibitions online exhibitions emily carr timeline https royalbcmuseum bc ca visit exhibitions emily carr fresh seeing french modernism and west coast https artsandculture google com partner royal bc museum hl en Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emily Carr amp oldid 1217807000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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