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Franklin Carmichael

Franklin Carmichael RCA (May 4, 1890 – October 24, 1945) was a Canadian artist and member of the Group of Seven. Though he was primarily famous for his use of watercolours, he also used oil paints, charcoal and other media to capture the Ontario landscapes. Besides his work as a painter, he worked as a designer and illustrator, creating promotional brochures, advertisements in newspapers and magazines, and designing books. Near the end of his life, Carmichael taught in the Graphic Design and Commercial Art Department at the Ontario College of Art (today the Ontario College of Art & Design University).

Franklin Carmichael

Frank Carmichael, 1930
Born(1890-05-04)May 4, 1890
Orillia, Ontario, Canada
DiedOctober 24, 1945(1945-10-24) (aged 55)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeSaint Andrews and Saint James Cemetery, Orillia
44°37′N 79°26′W / 44.61°N 79.44°W / 44.61; -79.44
Education
Alma materOntario College of Art
Known for
  • Painter
MovementGroup of Seven
Spouse
Ada Lillian Went
(m. 1915)
ElectedRoyal Canadian Academy of Arts

The youngest original member of the Group of Seven, Carmichael often found himself socially on the outside of the group. Despite this, the art he produced was of equal measure in terms of style and approach to the other members' contributions, vividly expressing his spiritual views through his art. The next youngest member was A. J. Casson with whom he was friendly.

Biography edit

Early years edit

Franklin Carmichael was born in 1890 in Orillia, Ontario, the son of David Graham and Susannah Eleanor (Smith) Carmichael.[1][2] Because his artistic talents were already apparent at a very young age, his mother enrolled him in both music and art lessons.[3]

As a teenager, Carmichael worked in his father's carriage making shop as a striper. In decorating the carriages he practiced his design, drawing, and colouring skills.[3]

Emerging artist (1910–1920) edit

In 1910, at the age of twenty, Carmichael arrived in Toronto and entered the Ontario College of Art, where he studied with William Cruickshank and George Reid. Among his fellow students was Gustav Hahn.[4]

 
The Studio Building in Toronto where Carmichael shared a space with Tom Thomson

By 1911, he began working as an apprentice at Grip Ltd. making $2.50 a week. Late in the year, Lawren Harris and J. E. H. MacDonald began sketching together, soon to be joined by Carmichael and his coworkers at Grip, including Arthur Lismer, Tom Thomson and Frank Johnston. By 1913, the excursions also included Frederick Varley and A.Y. Jackson.[5]

Carmichael moved to Antwerp, Belgium in 1913 to study painting at Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts. Due to the outbreak of World War I, he cut his studies short and returned to his native Ontario in September 1914, rejoining Thomson, Macdonald, Lismer, Varley and Johnston.[1][6][7] Staying in Toronto during the war, they struggled in the depressed wartime economy.[8][note 1]

During the fall of 1914, he moved into the Studio Building and shared a space with Thomson over the winter.[6][10][11]

Carmichael and the members of the group were frustrated by their initial attempts to capture the untouched "savage" land of Canada, with the particular characteristics of the land difficult to represent in the European tradition.[12] Jackson would write that, "after painting in Europe where everything was mellowed by time and human associations, I found it a problem to paint a country in outward appearance pretty much as it had been when Champlain passed through its thousands of rock islands three hundred years before."[13]

It would be only after the group discovered the paintings of Scandinavian landscapes that they would begin to move in a coherent direction.[14] According to MacDonald, the Scandinavian painters "seemed to be a lot of men not trying to express themselves so much as trying to express something that took hold of themselves. The painters began with nature rather than with art."[15]

Thomson invited Carmichael on a sketching trip to Algonquin Park in the fall of 1915. Carmichael could not go because of his September 15 marriage to Ada Lillian Went.[16]

 
Studies by Carmichael of his wife, Ada Carmichael (née Lillian Went), c. 1925–1935, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Group of Seven (1920–1932) edit

In April 1920, the Group of Seven was established by Jackson, Harris, MacDonald, Lismer, Varley, Johnston and Carmichael. The group held its first exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto from May 7 to 27, 1920.[17]

In 1922, Carmichael joined the Sampson-Matthews firm, a printmaking business. He likely worked as head designer under the art directorship of J.E. Sampson.[18]

In 1925, Carmichael, Harris and Jackson ventured to the northern shore of Lake Superior. On the trip, Carmichael opted to use watercolour rather than his usual oil paints. He used watercolour consistently from this point onward, painting some of his most famous works with the medium. After this initial experience, he would return several more times to the lake, including in 1926 and 1928.[7] This area on Lake Superior as well as the Northern shore of Lake Huron in the La Cloche mountains would be consistent themes in his work.[19]

According to writer Peter Mellen, the considerably young Carmichael and A. J. Casson "always remained slightly on the fringes of the Group" due to the age gap between them and the other members.[20] Together with F. H. Brigden, Carmichael and Casson founded the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour (in French: La Société Canadienne de Peintres en Aquarelle), in 1925 [7]

Theosophy and spiritual influences edit

The entire group – but Carmichael in particular – strove to give visual form to spiritual value, with some members drawing on theosophy (an offshoot of transcendentalism)[21] and the spiritualist founder of the Theosophical Society, Helena Blavatsky.[22][23] Theosophy was "predicated on the centrality of intuition as an inclusive but not exclusive tool, and on an individual, emotive approach to divinity. This divinity was immanent, indwelling, permanently pervading the universe."[24]

According to the doctrine of theosophy, a northern "spiritual, cultural, and aesthetic renaissance" was to take place in North America, with Canada playing a particularly special role because of its location.[25][26] The northern emphasis provided by Theosophy appealed to the "land-based nationalism" of the Group of Seven, expressed particularly by Carmichael, Lismer and MacDonald.[21][note 2] In 1926, Harris published an article, "Revelation of Art in Canada," that appeared in the Canadian Theosophist.[28][29] In it, Harris wrote,

We (Canadians) are on the fringe of the great North and its living whiteness, its loneliness and replenishment, its resignations and release, its call and answer, its cleansing rhythms. It seems that the top of the continent is a source of spiritual flow that will ever shed clarity on the growing American race, and we Canadians being closest to this source seem destined to produce an art somewhat different from our Southern fellows, an art more spacious, of a greater living quiet, perhaps of a certain conviction of eternal values. We were not placed between the southern teeming of men and the ample, replenishing North for nothing.[26][30]

Harris further elaborated in another article:

The source of our art then is not in the achievements of other artists in other days and lands, although it has learned a great deal from these. Our art is founded on a long and growing love and understanding of the North in an ever clearer experience of oneness with the informing spirit of the whole land and a strange brooding sense of Mother Nature fostering a new race and a new age [...] So the Canadian artist was drawn north.[31][32]

The Group's views were not restricted to theosophy, however, but were also influenced by the European Symbolists, Irish nationalist George Russell (Æ)[21] and transcendentalists like Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson.[22]

Move from commercial art to teaching (1932–1945) edit

By 1932, he left commercial art and taught as the head of the Graphic Design and Commercial Art Department the Ontario College of Art until his death in 1945.[7] Following the Group of Seven's disbandment in 1933, Carmichael helped to found the Canadian Group of Painters, which several members of the Group of Seven would later join. After the split, the artistic strength of the other Group of Seven members seemed to diminish, though Carmichael has been noted (along with Harris) as persisting in his strength.[33]

His fondness for the La Cloche Mountains of Ontario led him to build a log cabin on Cranberry Lake in 1934–1935.[19][34]

Carmichael died suddenly of a heart attack while returning home from the Ontario College of Art on October 24, 1945.[35] He is buried at St. Andrew's and St. James Cemetery in Orillia, Ontario.[36]

Style and works edit

 
Tom Thomson, In Algonquin Park, Winter 1914–15. 63.2 × 81.1 cm (24+78 × 311516 in). McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg
 
Franklin Carmichael, A Muskoka Road, 1915. 70.2 x 101.9 cm (27+58 × 40+18 in.). McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg
The art historian Joan Murray compares Tom Thomson's In Algonquin Park (left) with Carmichael's A Muskoka Road (right), particularly in how Carmichael "[imitates] the indeterminately foliated but defined trunks of Thomson's early work."[37]

Carmichael's artistic breakthrough came after his return to Canada in 1914, once he took up residence with Thomson in the Studio Building. In the winter of that year, he recorded outdoor sketches and produced one of his first major works, A Muskoka Road. The scene depicted in the painting is that of a snowy road, illustrating his broad handling and bold brushwork.[38] Art historian Joan Murray wrote that "Thomson's way of painting strongly influenced Carmichael."[37] The influence of Thomson can be seen in Carmichael's initial attempts at capturing clouds and snow; his early efforts show he did not yet understand structure and colour on the same level as Thomson.[37]

Carmichael eventually came to favour landscape art, and many of his pieces display an effort to achieve rich colour and design.[38] Besides a few studies in his notes, he produced only a single portrait in oil on canvas in his entire career: Woman in Black Hat, a rendering of an unidentified subject from 1939.[39][40] Art historian David Silcox praised the painting, writing that it "makes one wish that [Carmichael] had tackled more."[41]

Carmichael's final painting, Gambit No. 1, was painted in 1945 and was his only abstract piece.[42][43][44] It was his first major canvas since 1942.[45] Art historian Joyce Zemans thought the painting indicated Carmichael was moving in a new direction, though given the timing of the work at the end of his life it is difficult to know whether he would have continued.[44] Montreal artist Kristine Moran wrote favourably of the painting, understanding "Carmichael's desire to push out from under the constraints of the Post-Impressionist landscape style for which the Group of Seven was so well known."[42] Joan Murray was less enthused with the work, writing, "Abstraction was not Carmichael's game and this painting, so influenced by [Lawren] Harris, is not good."[43]

Landscape edit

Famous for his watercolours, Carmichael was a passionate landscape painter.[46][47] Many of his paintings depict the trees, rocks, hills, and mountains of Ontario. His earlier works had flat juxtapositions of colour, but as he matured through the 1920s he emphasized depth and three dimensional space.[48] Early works like the 1920 painting Autumn Hillside display pictorial motifs that became common to his later work.[38] For example, he utilizes effects of distant weather and a partially shadowed foreground. Carmichael's developing maturity is seen in perhaps his most famous work, The Upper Ottawa, Near Mattawa.[49] The painting shows an understanding of the distinct, massive geometric surfaces of rocks, and is also presented from a viewpoint that would come to characterize much of his later work, utilizing height to emphasize time and weather.[49]

Beyond simple representation of picturesque views, Carmichael attempted to capture contrast. This is seen in his early work Autumn Foliage Against Grey Rock which compares the rocky landscape to a bright autumnal tree along with a pink and green sky.[50]

 
The Upper Ottawa, near Mattawa, 1924, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

After Carmichael's ventures to Lake Superior in the mid-to-late 1920s, Bertram Brooker and other friends recognized the spiritual dimensions of his work. Besides his interest theosophy, he also studied transcendentalism,[51] owning a copy of Ralph Waldo Emerson's Essays and Other Writings, amongst many other books.[52] During this time, he made significant changes in style through bolder use of colour and an overall simplification in approach.[52] This is evident in his 1930 watercolour, Snow Flurries: North Shore of Lake Superior,[7] a painting Joan Murray describes as "an almost breathtaking achievement".[37] The work which contrasts the dark blue-green simplified hills against the clouds above. Further comparison has been drawn between this painting and Harris' work from Lake Superior.[7] Similarly, in the 1931 oil painting Bay of Islands From Mt. Burke, he illuminates the foreground with a burst of light. From this light, patches of green, brown, gold and orange indicate the areas of the hill where vegetation lay.[53]

From 1924 on, Carmichael painted the La Cloche Mountains, located in northern Ontario, above Lake Huron, and he expressed his admiration for the "humped contours", white quartzite rock and long stretches of water.[54] This is seen in Lake Wabagishik, the first area he painted in the mountains in which there is no evidence of previous human presence.[55] The painting itself depicts a storm, with rain falling on the distant hills and the wind blowing both the water and trees.[55] In 1935, he bought five acres of land on Cranberry Lake and built a cabin there and then could paint the area at all times of day but storms and other weather phenomena remained a favourite subject of his work. One such example is Snow Clouds from 1938, which communicates a tension between the land and the snow storm approaching from the distance.[56]

Watercolours edit

Carmichael preferred to depict his outdoor subjects in watercolour. He believed in the independent validity to the medium, and believed them to be equal to oil painting. He co-founded the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour in 1925, in an effort to give the medium the importance and recognition it deserved. He said of the medium:

It is capable of responding to the slightest variation of effect or mood. It can be at once clean cut, sharp, delicate and forceful or subtle, brilliant or sombre, including all of the variations that lie in between.[57]

Industry and the environment edit

 
The Nickel Belt, 1928, Firestone Collection of Canadian Art, Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa

By the 1930s, Carmichael's work explored themes of industry in northern Ontario, particularly the mining regions.[7] His first depiction of an industrial building is Old Lime Kilns, Rockwood, a sketch made on a 1927 trip with Casson to Rockwood, Ontario.[58]

The 1928 canvas, The Nickel Belt, depicts smoke billowing away into the clouds and a barren rocky foreground.[59] The work juxtaposes bare nature with the ugly environmental effects caused by industry,[60] depicting the wilderness present in his earlier canvases, but also "the billowing extrusion of smoke waste".[61] Art historian Rosemary Donegan writes of the work, "The dramatic beauty of the burnt blue-green rolling hills, seen from a bird's-eye perspective, is subverted by the distant smoke plumes and smelter stacks, which raise questions about the effect of ore smelting on the local landscape."[62] Donegan further compares the work to A.Y. Jackson's 1932 depiction of the Falconbridge smelter near Sudbury, Smoke Fantasy, though she found Carmichael better imbued his painting with power and meaning than Jackson did his.[62] Jackson took his government lobbying efforts further however, pleading in a letter to the minister of Lands and Forests William Finlayson to preserve what became Killarney Provincial Park and Trout Lake. The latter was renamed O.S.A. Lake in honour of the Ontario Society of Artists.[63]

The 1930 canvas A Northern Silver Mine is a composite of several sketches and watercolours following an August 1930 trip to the mining town of Cobalt, Ontario.[61][64] This painting depicts the relationship of industrial town and nature, where "[t]he houses and mines seem scattered and fragile against the agitated convolutions of the hills."[61] The mine in the foreground and polluted river "[illustrate] the bleakness of the land around the smelters and mines during the 1930s."[64]

Design, printmaking and illustration edit

 
Old Orchard, c. 1940, wood engraving on laid paper, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Like the other members of the Group, Carmichael drew constantly in pencil and ink.[46] He also produced many etchings, linocuts and wood engravings over his lifetime, and was an expert at woodblock and linoleum prints, having become familiar with printing methods from his work in commercial art.[46] In commercial art, the other members of the Group of Seven typically restricted themselves to illustration work; Carmichael, however, took an active role in book design. In one case, he produced the wood engravings, selected the paper, directed the typography and did the complete design for Grace Campbell's 1942 book, Thorn-Apple Tree.[65][note 3] He worked on book illustrations for Canadian publishers from 1942 until the end of his life.[7]

While working at Sampson-Matthews in the 1920s, his other illustration work saw him designing promotional brochures as well as advertisements for newspapers and magazines. As was typical for the time, his design style was flat and simplified.[18] He also produced illustrations for magazines, including the cover of a 1928 issue of Maclean's magazine.[18]

In Carmichael's early design career, he found the need to avoid meaningless ornamentation, writing

These different things – repose, dignity, movement, energy, grace, rhythm – are part of our very life and make-up. They represent the pattern of our material life and they are the material/structure on which we build designs.[18]

Legacy edit

Contemporary Emily Carr wrote that Carmichael's work was, "A little pretty and too soft, but pleasant."[66]

Carmichael was a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (RCA) and awarded the RCA Medal in 1969.[67][68] In 1952, Dr. Ann Curtin and Carmichael's widow founded the Franklin Carmichael Art Group, located at 34 Riverdale Drive in Toronto.

In 1990, Carmichael's granddaughter, Catharine Mastin, and curator Megan Bice held an exhibition of Carmichael's work at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection.[37][69] In a review of the exhibition, Joan Murray was disappointed in the organizers focus on Carmichael's oil works, which she saw as "overworked and overfinished", rather than his "sublime" watercolours.[70] Catharine Mastin has since been a curator at the Glenbow Museum in Calgary and directed the Art Gallery of Windsor and written about her grandfather's art.[71]

The 1929 watercolour Lone Lake was considered to be the highlight of a major sale of Canadian art in May 2012 at Joyner Waddington's spring art auction in Toronto, ON, selling for CAD$330,400.[72] The subject of the painting is a small lake called Carmichael Lake in the La Cloche Mountains of Killarney Provincial Park near Sudbury, Ontario.[73]

Selected paintings edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Jackson enlisted in June 1915 and served in France from November 1915 to 1917, at which point he was seriously injured.[9] Harris enlisted in 1916 at taught musketry at Camp Borden. He was discharged in May 1918 after suffering a nervous breakdown. Carmichael, along with MacDonald, Thomson, Varley and Johnston remained in Toronto.[8] For a thorough discussion of the activity of the group during the war, refer to Mellen (1970), p. 70; Larisey (1993), pp. 34–36; Reid (1971), pp. 109–120
  2. ^ Lismer and Harris were the only official members of the Theosophical Society.[27][21]
  3. ^ Carmichael completed 15 original woodcuts for the book. For more regarding Campbell's novel, refer to New (2002), p. 173

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Silcox (2006), p. 19.
  2. ^ "History Mysteries: Franklin Carmichael's Orillia Part One". Orillia Museum of Art and History. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Franklin Carmichael [1890–1945]". McMichael Canadian Art Collection. from the original on February 26, 2018. Retrieved February 25, 2018.
  4. ^ Leigh, Brandi. "Franklin Carmichael – Member of the Group of Seven, Canadian Painters". www.arthistoryarchive.com. from the original on February 21, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  5. ^ Roza (1997), pp. 12–13.
  6. ^ a b Hill (2002), p. 128.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "Franklin Carmichael". www.gallery.ca. from the original on February 21, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  8. ^ a b Roza (1997), p. 26 n. 24.
  9. ^ Mellen (1970), p. 70.
  10. ^ Klages (2016), p. 207.
  11. ^ King (2010), pp. 154–59.
  12. ^ Roza (1997), p. 16.
  13. ^ Jackson (1958), p. 25.
  14. ^ Roza (1997), pp. 17–19.
  15. ^ MacDonald, "Lecture" 2.
  16. ^ Bice & Mastin (1990), p. 18.
  17. ^ Roza (1997), p. 39.
  18. ^ a b c d "Franklin Carmichael Design". McMichael Canadian Art Collection. from the original on February 26, 2018. Retrieved February 25, 2018.
  19. ^ a b Murray (2006), p. 40.
  20. ^ Mellen (1970), p. 158.
  21. ^ a b c d Roza (1997), p. 46 n. 14.
  22. ^ a b Silcox (2006), p. 27.
  23. ^ Murray (2006), p. 21.
  24. ^ Davis (1992), p. xvi.
  25. ^ Nasgaard (1984), p. 7.
  26. ^ a b Silcox (2006), p. 29.
  27. ^ Murray (2003), p. 17.
  28. ^ Murray (2006), pp. 25–26.
  29. ^ O'Brian (2007), pp. 277–78.
  30. ^ Harris (1926), pp. 85–86.
  31. ^ Harris (1929), p. 182.
  32. ^ Silcox (2006), pp. 29–30.
  33. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 350.
  34. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 214.
  35. ^ Bice & Mastin (1990), p. 96.
  36. ^ The Group of Seven
  37. ^ a b c d e Murray (1990), p. 155.
  38. ^ a b c Murray (2006), p. 17.
  39. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 96.
  40. ^ Bice & Mastin (1990), p. 89.
  41. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 76.
  42. ^ a b Moran (2020), p. 289.
  43. ^ a b Murray (1990), p. 159.
  44. ^ a b Zemans (2000), quoted in Zemans (2007), p. 205
  45. ^ Bice & Mastin (1990), p. 93.
  46. ^ a b c Silcox (2006), p. 31.
  47. ^ Murray (2006), p. 13.
  48. ^ "Franklin Carmichael Biography". www.manorhillfineart.com. from the original on January 3, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  49. ^ a b Murray (2006), pp. 32–33.
  50. ^ Murray (2006), pp. 30–31.
  51. ^ Roza (1997), 46 n. 14.
  52. ^ a b Murray (2006), pp. 36–37.
  53. ^ Murray (2006), pp. 42–43.
  54. ^ Mastin (1990), pp. 106, 108.
  55. ^ a b Murray (2006), pp. 40–41.
  56. ^ Murray (2006), pp. 44–45.
  57. ^ "works". cowleyabbott.ca. Cowley Abbott Auction, Important Canadian & International Art, December 6th,,2023. Retrieved October 26, 2023.
  58. ^ Bice & Mastin (1990), p. 70.
  59. ^ Murray (2006), p. 23.
  60. ^ Murray (2006), pp. 38–39.
  61. ^ a b c Bice & Mastin (1990), p. 72.
  62. ^ a b Donegan (2007), p. 147.
  63. ^ Waddington & Waddington (2016), p. 226.
  64. ^ a b Waddington & Waddington (2016), p. 224.
  65. ^ New (2002), p. 132.
  66. ^ Carr (1966), p. 13.
  67. ^ McMann, Evelyn (1981). Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Retrieved June 2, 2022.
  68. ^ . Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Archived from the original on May 26, 2011. Retrieved September 11, 2013.
  69. ^ Bice & Mastin (1990).
  70. ^ Murray (1990), p. 156: "In Carmichael's works of the 1930s, he managed the structure but at the same time began to overwork and overfinish. This killed him as a painter of larger works... Mainly, he could not relax in the large works: the fear of being not good enough may have been too great."
    Murray (1990), p. 159: "For [Carmichael], watercolour was the supreme art, one attuned to his subtlest impulse. He was a subtle man. All the more reason, therefore, for this comprehensive exhibition to have included more watercolours. Here, where Carmichael was sublime, we were offered only a sampling."
  71. ^ Milroy, Sarah (January 12, 2002). "A portrait of two artists in one". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
  72. ^ CBC News (May 25, 2012). "Modern and traditional art scores at Joyner auction: Buyers snap up Group of Seven, contemporary works in Toronto". from the original on June 3, 2015. Retrieved May 30, 2015.
  73. ^ Boswell, Randy (April 28, 2012). . Postmedia News. Archived from the original on May 2, 2012.

Sources edit

  • Bice, Megan; Mastin, Mary Carmichael (1990). Light and Shadow: The Work of Franklin Carmichael. McMichael Canadian Art Collection. ISBN 978-0-7729-6739-8.
  • Carr, Emily (1966). "Meeting with the Group of Seven, 1927". Hundreds and Thousands: The Journals of an Artist. Toronto: Irwin Publishing. ISBN 0-7725-1617-0.
  • Davis, Ann (1992). The Logic of Ecstasy: Canadian Mystical Painting, 1920–1940. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-6861-3.
  • Donegan, Rosemary (2007). "Modernism and the Industrial Imagination: Copper Cliff and the Sudbury Basin". In O'Brian, John; White, Peter (eds.). Beyond Wilderness: The Group of Seven, Canadian Identity, and Contemporary Art. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-3244-1.
  • Harris, Lawren (July 15, 1926). "Revelation of Art in Canada". Canadian Theosophist. 7 (5).
  • ——— (1929). "Creative Art and Canada". In Bertram (ed.). Yearbook of the Arts in Canada, 1928–1929. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
  • Hill, Charles (2002). "Tom Thomson, Painter". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre. pp. 111–143.
  • Jackson, A. Y. (1958). A Painter's Country. Toronto: Clarke Irwin.
  • MacDonald, J. E. H. J.E.H. MacDonald fonds, ID: MG30 D111. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada.
  • King, Ross (2010). Defiant Spirits: The Modernist Revolution of the Group of Seven. D & M Publishers. ISBN 978-1-55365-807-8.
  • Klages, Gregory (2016). The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson: Separating Fact from Fiction. Toronto: Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1-4597-3196-7.
  • Larisey, Peter S.J. (1993). Light for a Cold Land: Lawren Harris's Work and Life – An Interpretation. Toronto: Dundurn.
  • Mastin, Mary Charmichael (1990). "The La Cloche Decision". In Bice, Megan; Mastin, Mary Carmichael (eds.). Light and Shadow: The Work of Franklin Carmichael. McMichael Canadian Art Collection. pp. 106–111. ISBN 978-0-7729-6739-8.
  • Mellen, Peter (1970). The Group of Seven. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-5815-8.
  • Moran, Kristine (2020). "Gambit #1". In Dejardin, Ian A. C.; Milroy, Sarah (eds.). A Like Vision: The Group of Seven & Tom Thomson. Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions. p. 289. ISBN 978-1-77310-205-4.
  • Murray, Joan (Summer 1990). "Carmichael's Triumph?". Journal of Canadian Studies. 25 (2): 155–59. doi:10.3138/jcs.25.2.155. S2CID 151323505.
  • ——— (2006). Rocks: Franklin Carmichael, Arthur Lismer, and the Group of Seven. Toronto: McArthur & Company. ISBN 978-1-55278-616-1.
  • Nasgaard, Roald (1984). The Mystic North: Symbolist Landscape Painting in Northern Europe and North America 1890–1940. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • New, William H. (2002). Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-0761-2.
  • O'Brian, John (2007). Beyond Wilderness: The Group of Seven, Canadian Identity, and Contemporary Art. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-7558-5.
  • Reid, Dennis R. (1971). A Bibliography of the Group of Seven. Ottawa: The National Gallery of Canada.
  • Roza, Alexandra M. (1997). Towards a Modern Canadian Art 1910–1936: The Group of Seven, A.J.M. Smith and F.R. Scott (PDF) (Thesis). McGill University.
  • Silcox, David P. (2006). The Group of Seven and Tom Thomson. Toronto: Firefly Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-55407-154-8.
  • Waddington, Jim; Waddington, Sue (2016). In the Footsteps of the Group of Seven (paperback ed.). Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions. ISBN 978-0-86492-891-7.
  • Zemans, Joyce (October 9, 2000). "What would the Group of Seven Say?". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  • ——— (2007). "What Would the Group of Seven Say?". In O'Brian, John; White, Peter (eds.). Beyond Wilderness: The Group of Seven, Canadian Identity, and Contemporary Art. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-3244-1.

Further reading edit

  • Carmichael, Franklin (1978). A Portfolio of Drawings. Hearst: University College of Hearst.
  • Franklin Carmichael Memorial Exhibition. Toronto: Art Gallery of Toronto. 1947.
  • Franklin Carmichael Prints/gravures. Kleinburg: McMichael Canadian Art Collection. 1984.
  • Harper, John Russell (1977). Painting in Canada: A History (2nd ed.). Toronto: Univ. of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-6307-1.
  • Mastin, Catherine M. (1992). Thorn-Apple Tree: Book Illustrations by Franklin Carmichael. Exhibition catalogue; 1 folded sheet. Windsor: Art Gallery of Windsor.
  • ——— (1995). Franklin Carmichael. New Views on Canadian Art series. Kingston: Quarry Press.
  • ——— (2001). Portrait of a Spiritualist: Franklin Carmichael and the National Gallery of Canada Collection. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada.
  • Murray, Joan (2003). Lawren Harris: An Introduction to his Life and Art. Toronto: Firefly Books. Retrieved May 6, 2021.
  • Reid, Dennis (1988). A Concise History of Canadian Painting (2nd ed.). Toronto: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195444575.
  • Thom, Ian M (1981). Franklin Carmichael Watercolours. Exhibition catalogue. Victoria: Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Franklin Carmichael at Wikimedia Commons

franklin, carmichael, 1890, october, 1945, canadian, artist, member, group, seven, though, primarily, famous, watercolours, also, used, paints, charcoal, other, media, capture, ontario, landscapes, besides, work, painter, worked, designer, illustrator, creatin. Franklin Carmichael RCA May 4 1890 October 24 1945 was a Canadian artist and member of the Group of Seven Though he was primarily famous for his use of watercolours he also used oil paints charcoal and other media to capture the Ontario landscapes Besides his work as a painter he worked as a designer and illustrator creating promotional brochures advertisements in newspapers and magazines and designing books Near the end of his life Carmichael taught in the Graphic Design and Commercial Art Department at the Ontario College of Art today the Ontario College of Art amp Design University Franklin CarmichaelRCAFrank Carmichael 1930Born 1890 05 04 May 4 1890Orillia Ontario CanadaDiedOctober 24 1945 1945 10 24 aged 55 Toronto Ontario CanadaResting placeSaint Andrews and Saint James Cemetery Orillia44 37 N 79 26 W 44 61 N 79 44 W 44 61 79 44EducationWilliam Cruikshank George Agnew ReidAlma materOntario College of ArtKnown forPainterMovementGroup of SevenSpouseAda Lillian Went m 1915 wbr ElectedRoyal Canadian Academy of ArtsThe youngest original member of the Group of Seven Carmichael often found himself socially on the outside of the group Despite this the art he produced was of equal measure in terms of style and approach to the other members contributions vividly expressing his spiritual views through his art The next youngest member was A J Casson with whom he was friendly Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Emerging artist 1910 1920 1 3 Group of Seven 1920 1932 1 3 1 Theosophy and spiritual influences 1 4 Move from commercial art to teaching 1932 1945 2 Style and works 2 1 Landscape 3 Watercolours 3 1 Industry and the environment 3 2 Design printmaking and illustration 4 Legacy 5 Selected paintings 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Franklin Carmichael was born in 1890 in Orillia Ontario the son of David Graham and Susannah Eleanor Smith Carmichael 1 2 Because his artistic talents were already apparent at a very young age his mother enrolled him in both music and art lessons 3 As a teenager Carmichael worked in his father s carriage making shop as a striper In decorating the carriages he practiced his design drawing and colouring skills 3 Emerging artist 1910 1920 edit In 1910 at the age of twenty Carmichael arrived in Toronto and entered the Ontario College of Art where he studied with William Cruickshank and George Reid Among his fellow students was Gustav Hahn 4 nbsp The Studio Building in Toronto where Carmichael shared a space with Tom ThomsonBy 1911 he began working as an apprentice at Grip Ltd making 2 50 a week Late in the year Lawren Harris and J E H MacDonald began sketching together soon to be joined by Carmichael and his coworkers at Grip including Arthur Lismer Tom Thomson and Frank Johnston By 1913 the excursions also included Frederick Varley and A Y Jackson 5 Carmichael moved to Antwerp Belgium in 1913 to study painting at Academie Royale des Beaux Arts Due to the outbreak of World War I he cut his studies short and returned to his native Ontario in September 1914 rejoining Thomson Macdonald Lismer Varley and Johnston 1 6 7 Staying in Toronto during the war they struggled in the depressed wartime economy 8 note 1 During the fall of 1914 he moved into the Studio Building and shared a space with Thomson over the winter 6 10 11 Carmichael and the members of the group were frustrated by their initial attempts to capture the untouched savage land of Canada with the particular characteristics of the land difficult to represent in the European tradition 12 Jackson would write that after painting in Europe where everything was mellowed by time and human associations I found it a problem to paint a country in outward appearance pretty much as it had been when Champlain passed through its thousands of rock islands three hundred years before 13 It would be only after the group discovered the paintings of Scandinavian landscapes that they would begin to move in a coherent direction 14 According to MacDonald the Scandinavian painters seemed to be a lot of men not trying to express themselves so much as trying to express something that took hold of themselves The painters began with nature rather than with art 15 Thomson invited Carmichael on a sketching trip to Algonquin Park in the fall of 1915 Carmichael could not go because of his September 15 marriage to Ada Lillian Went 16 nbsp Studies by Carmichael of his wife Ada Carmichael nee Lillian Went c 1925 1935 National Gallery of Canada OttawaGroup of Seven 1920 1932 edit Main article Group of Seven artists In April 1920 the Group of Seven was established by Jackson Harris MacDonald Lismer Varley Johnston and Carmichael The group held its first exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto from May 7 to 27 1920 17 In 1922 Carmichael joined the Sampson Matthews firm a printmaking business He likely worked as head designer under the art directorship of J E Sampson 18 In 1925 Carmichael Harris and Jackson ventured to the northern shore of Lake Superior On the trip Carmichael opted to use watercolour rather than his usual oil paints He used watercolour consistently from this point onward painting some of his most famous works with the medium After this initial experience he would return several more times to the lake including in 1926 and 1928 7 This area on Lake Superior as well as the Northern shore of Lake Huron in the La Cloche mountains would be consistent themes in his work 19 According to writer Peter Mellen the considerably young Carmichael and A J Casson always remained slightly on the fringes of the Group due to the age gap between them and the other members 20 Together with F H Brigden Carmichael and Casson founded the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour in French La Societe Canadienne de Peintres en Aquarelle in 1925 7 Theosophy and spiritual influences edit The entire group but Carmichael in particular strove to give visual form to spiritual value with some members drawing on theosophy an offshoot of transcendentalism 21 and the spiritualist founder of the Theosophical Society Helena Blavatsky 22 23 Theosophy was predicated on the centrality of intuition as an inclusive but not exclusive tool and on an individual emotive approach to divinity This divinity was immanent indwelling permanently pervading the universe 24 According to the doctrine of theosophy a northern spiritual cultural and aesthetic renaissance was to take place in North America with Canada playing a particularly special role because of its location 25 26 The northern emphasis provided by Theosophy appealed to the land based nationalism of the Group of Seven expressed particularly by Carmichael Lismer and MacDonald 21 note 2 In 1926 Harris published an article Revelation of Art in Canada that appeared in the Canadian Theosophist 28 29 In it Harris wrote We Canadians are on the fringe of the great North and its living whiteness its loneliness and replenishment its resignations and release its call and answer its cleansing rhythms It seems that the top of the continent is a source of spiritual flow that will ever shed clarity on the growing American race and we Canadians being closest to this source seem destined to produce an art somewhat different from our Southern fellows an art more spacious of a greater living quiet perhaps of a certain conviction of eternal values We were not placed between the southern teeming of men and the ample replenishing North for nothing 26 30 Harris further elaborated in another article The source of our art then is not in the achievements of other artists in other days and lands although it has learned a great deal from these Our art is founded on a long and growing love and understanding of the North in an ever clearer experience of oneness with the informing spirit of the whole land and a strange brooding sense of Mother Nature fostering a new race and a new age So the Canadian artist was drawn north 31 32 The Group s views were not restricted to theosophy however but were also influenced by the European Symbolists Irish nationalist George Russell AE 21 and transcendentalists like Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson 22 Move from commercial art to teaching 1932 1945 edit By 1932 he left commercial art and taught as the head of the Graphic Design and Commercial Art Department the Ontario College of Art until his death in 1945 7 Following the Group of Seven s disbandment in 1933 Carmichael helped to found the Canadian Group of Painters which several members of the Group of Seven would later join After the split the artistic strength of the other Group of Seven members seemed to diminish though Carmichael has been noted along with Harris as persisting in his strength 33 His fondness for the La Cloche Mountains of Ontario led him to build a log cabin on Cranberry Lake in 1934 1935 19 34 Carmichael died suddenly of a heart attack while returning home from the Ontario College of Art on October 24 1945 35 He is buried at St Andrew s and St James Cemetery in Orillia Ontario 36 Style and works edit nbsp Tom Thomson In Algonquin Park Winter 1914 15 63 2 81 1 cm 24 7 8 3115 16 in McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Franklin Carmichael A Muskoka Road 1915 70 2 x 101 9 cm 27 5 8 40 1 8 in McMichael Canadian Art Collection KleinburgThe art historian Joan Murray compares Tom Thomson s In Algonquin Park left with Carmichael s A Muskoka Road right particularly in how Carmichael imitates the indeterminately foliated but defined trunks of Thomson s early work 37 Carmichael s artistic breakthrough came after his return to Canada in 1914 once he took up residence with Thomson in the Studio Building In the winter of that year he recorded outdoor sketches and produced one of his first major works A Muskoka Road The scene depicted in the painting is that of a snowy road illustrating his broad handling and bold brushwork 38 Art historian Joan Murray wrote that Thomson s way of painting strongly influenced Carmichael 37 The influence of Thomson can be seen in Carmichael s initial attempts at capturing clouds and snow his early efforts show he did not yet understand structure and colour on the same level as Thomson 37 Carmichael eventually came to favour landscape art and many of his pieces display an effort to achieve rich colour and design 38 Besides a few studies in his notes he produced only a single portrait in oil on canvas in his entire career Woman in Black Hat a rendering of an unidentified subject from 1939 39 40 Art historian David Silcox praised the painting writing that it makes one wish that Carmichael had tackled more 41 Carmichael s final painting Gambit No 1 was painted in 1945 and was his only abstract piece 42 43 44 It was his first major canvas since 1942 45 Art historian Joyce Zemans thought the painting indicated Carmichael was moving in a new direction though given the timing of the work at the end of his life it is difficult to know whether he would have continued 44 Montreal artist Kristine Moran wrote favourably of the painting understanding Carmichael s desire to push out from under the constraints of the Post Impressionist landscape style for which the Group of Seven was so well known 42 Joan Murray was less enthused with the work writing Abstraction was not Carmichael s game and this painting so influenced by Lawren Harris is not good 43 Landscape edit Famous for his watercolours Carmichael was a passionate landscape painter 46 47 Many of his paintings depict the trees rocks hills and mountains of Ontario His earlier works had flat juxtapositions of colour but as he matured through the 1920s he emphasized depth and three dimensional space 48 Early works like the 1920 painting Autumn Hillside display pictorial motifs that became common to his later work 38 For example he utilizes effects of distant weather and a partially shadowed foreground Carmichael s developing maturity is seen in perhaps his most famous work The Upper Ottawa Near Mattawa 49 The painting shows an understanding of the distinct massive geometric surfaces of rocks and is also presented from a viewpoint that would come to characterize much of his later work utilizing height to emphasize time and weather 49 Beyond simple representation of picturesque views Carmichael attempted to capture contrast This is seen in his early work Autumn Foliage Against Grey Rock which compares the rocky landscape to a bright autumnal tree along with a pink and green sky 50 nbsp The Upper Ottawa near Mattawa 1924 National Gallery of Canada OttawaAfter Carmichael s ventures to Lake Superior in the mid to late 1920s Bertram Brooker and other friends recognized the spiritual dimensions of his work Besides his interest theosophy he also studied transcendentalism 51 owning a copy of Ralph Waldo Emerson s Essays and Other Writings amongst many other books 52 During this time he made significant changes in style through bolder use of colour and an overall simplification in approach 52 This is evident in his 1930 watercolour Snow Flurries North Shore of Lake Superior 7 a painting Joan Murray describes as an almost breathtaking achievement 37 The work which contrasts the dark blue green simplified hills against the clouds above Further comparison has been drawn between this painting and Harris work from Lake Superior 7 Similarly in the 1931 oil painting Bay of Islands From Mt Burke he illuminates the foreground with a burst of light From this light patches of green brown gold and orange indicate the areas of the hill where vegetation lay 53 From 1924 on Carmichael painted the La Cloche Mountains located in northern Ontario above Lake Huron and he expressed his admiration for the humped contours white quartzite rock and long stretches of water 54 This is seen in Lake Wabagishik the first area he painted in the mountains in which there is no evidence of previous human presence 55 The painting itself depicts a storm with rain falling on the distant hills and the wind blowing both the water and trees 55 In 1935 he bought five acres of land on Cranberry Lake and built a cabin there and then could paint the area at all times of day but storms and other weather phenomena remained a favourite subject of his work One such example is Snow Clouds from 1938 which communicates a tension between the land and the snow storm approaching from the distance 56 Watercolours editCarmichael preferred to depict his outdoor subjects in watercolour He believed in the independent validity to the medium and believed them to be equal to oil painting He co founded the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour in 1925 in an effort to give the medium the importance and recognition it deserved He said of the medium It is capable of responding to the slightest variation of effect or mood It can be at once clean cut sharp delicate and forceful or subtle brilliant or sombre including all of the variations that lie in between 57 nbsp Autumn Foliage against Grey Rock 1920 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Lake Wabagishik 1928 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Snow Flurries North Shore of Lake Superior 1930 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Bay of Islands from Mt Burke 1931 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Snow Clouds 1938 National Gallery of Canada OttawaIndustry and the environment edit nbsp The Nickel Belt 1928 Firestone Collection of Canadian Art Ottawa Art Gallery OttawaBy the 1930s Carmichael s work explored themes of industry in northern Ontario particularly the mining regions 7 His first depiction of an industrial building is Old Lime Kilns Rockwood a sketch made on a 1927 trip with Casson to Rockwood Ontario 58 The 1928 canvas The Nickel Belt depicts smoke billowing away into the clouds and a barren rocky foreground 59 The work juxtaposes bare nature with the ugly environmental effects caused by industry 60 depicting the wilderness present in his earlier canvases but also the billowing extrusion of smoke waste 61 Art historian Rosemary Donegan writes of the work The dramatic beauty of the burnt blue green rolling hills seen from a bird s eye perspective is subverted by the distant smoke plumes and smelter stacks which raise questions about the effect of ore smelting on the local landscape 62 Donegan further compares the work to A Y Jackson s 1932 depiction of the Falconbridge smelter near Sudbury Smoke Fantasy though she found Carmichael better imbued his painting with power and meaning than Jackson did his 62 Jackson took his government lobbying efforts further however pleading in a letter to the minister of Lands and Forests William Finlayson to preserve what became Killarney Provincial Park and Trout Lake The latter was renamed O S A Lake in honour of the Ontario Society of Artists 63 The 1930 canvas A Northern Silver Mine is a composite of several sketches and watercolours following an August 1930 trip to the mining town of Cobalt Ontario 61 64 This painting depicts the relationship of industrial town and nature where t he houses and mines seem scattered and fragile against the agitated convolutions of the hills 61 The mine in the foreground and polluted river illustrate the bleakness of the land around the smelters and mines during the 1930s 64 nbsp A Northern Silver Mine 1930 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp West River 1930 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Untitled 1930 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Untitled Industrial Building 1934 37 National Gallery of Canada OttawaDesign printmaking and illustration edit nbsp Old Orchard c 1940 wood engraving on laid paper National Gallery of Canada OttawaLike the other members of the Group Carmichael drew constantly in pencil and ink 46 He also produced many etchings linocuts and wood engravings over his lifetime and was an expert at woodblock and linoleum prints having become familiar with printing methods from his work in commercial art 46 In commercial art the other members of the Group of Seven typically restricted themselves to illustration work Carmichael however took an active role in book design In one case he produced the wood engravings selected the paper directed the typography and did the complete design for Grace Campbell s 1942 book Thorn Apple Tree 65 note 3 He worked on book illustrations for Canadian publishers from 1942 until the end of his life 7 While working at Sampson Matthews in the 1920s his other illustration work saw him designing promotional brochures as well as advertisements for newspapers and magazines As was typical for the time his design style was flat and simplified 18 He also produced illustrations for magazines including the cover of a 1928 issue of Maclean s magazine 18 In Carmichael s early design career he found the need to avoid meaningless ornamentation writing These different things repose dignity movement energy grace rhythm are part of our very life and make up They represent the pattern of our material life and they are the material structure on which we build designs 18 nbsp Advertisement By the sea Nova Scotia New Brunswick Prince Edward Island 1925 Library and Archives Canada Ottawa nbsp Pencilled Irises c 1925 1932 colour linocut on laid paper National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Church Burks Falls second version c 1930 wood engraving on calendered wove paper National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Untitled 1944 wood engraving on paper McMichael Canadian Art Collection KleinburgLegacy editContemporary Emily Carr wrote that Carmichael s work was A little pretty and too soft but pleasant 66 Carmichael was a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts RCA and awarded the RCA Medal in 1969 67 68 In 1952 Dr Ann Curtin and Carmichael s widow founded the Franklin Carmichael Art Group located at 34 Riverdale Drive in Toronto In 1990 Carmichael s granddaughter Catharine Mastin and curator Megan Bice held an exhibition of Carmichael s work at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection 37 69 In a review of the exhibition Joan Murray was disappointed in the organizers focus on Carmichael s oil works which she saw as overworked and overfinished rather than his sublime watercolours 70 Catharine Mastin has since been a curator at the Glenbow Museum in Calgary and directed the Art Gallery of Windsor and written about her grandfather s art 71 The 1929 watercolour Lone Lake was considered to be the highlight of a major sale of Canadian art in May 2012 at Joyner Waddington s spring art auction in Toronto ON selling for CAD 330 400 72 The subject of the painting is a small lake called Carmichael Lake in the La Cloche Mountains of Killarney Provincial Park near Sudbury Ontario 73 Selected paintings editPaintings by Franklin Carmichael nbsp Study for Sumacs oil on wood 1915 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Hillside oil on wood 1917 20 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Autumn Hillside oil on canvas 1920 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Spring oil on canvas 1920 private collection nbsp Silvery Tangle oil on canvas 1921 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Autumn oil on paperboard 1921 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp The Glade oil on canvas 1922 unknown nbsp October Gold oil on canvas 1922 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Untitled Pines Lake Superior 1925 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp The Whitefish Hills watercolour over graphite on wove paper 1929 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Wabajisik Drowned Land watercolour and gouache over charcoal on wove paper 1929 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Lone Lake watercolor 1929 private collection nbsp Bay of Islands watercolour on paper 1930 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Grace Lake oil on paperboard 1931 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Light and Shadow oil on hardboard 1937 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Farm Haliburton oil on hardboard 1940 McMichael Canadian Art Collection KleinburgReferences editFootnotes edit Jackson enlisted in June 1915 and served in France from November 1915 to 1917 at which point he was seriously injured 9 Harris enlisted in 1916 at taught musketry at Camp Borden He was discharged in May 1918 after suffering a nervous breakdown Carmichael along with MacDonald Thomson Varley and Johnston remained in Toronto 8 For a thorough discussion of the activity of the group during the war refer to Mellen 1970 p 70 Larisey 1993 pp 34 36 Reid 1971 pp 109 120 Lismer and Harris were the only official members of the Theosophical Society 27 21 Carmichael completed 15 original woodcuts for the book For more regarding Campbell s novel refer to New 2002 p 173 Citations edit a b Silcox 2006 p 19 History Mysteries Franklin Carmichael s Orillia Part One Orillia Museum of Art and History Retrieved December 14 2020 a b Franklin Carmichael 1890 1945 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Archived from the original on February 26 2018 Retrieved February 25 2018 Leigh Brandi Franklin Carmichael Member of the Group of Seven Canadian Painters www arthistoryarchive com Archived from the original on February 21 2018 Retrieved February 21 2018 Roza 1997 pp 12 13 a b Hill 2002 p 128 a b c d e f g h Franklin Carmichael www gallery ca Archived from the original on February 21 2018 Retrieved February 21 2018 a b Roza 1997 p 26 n 24 Mellen 1970 p 70 Klages 2016 p 207 King 2010 pp 154 59 Roza 1997 p 16 Jackson 1958 p 25 Roza 1997 pp 17 19 MacDonald Lecture 2 Bice amp Mastin 1990 p 18 Roza 1997 p 39 a b c d Franklin Carmichael Design McMichael Canadian Art Collection Archived from the original on February 26 2018 Retrieved February 25 2018 a b Murray 2006 p 40 Mellen 1970 p 158 a b c d Roza 1997 p 46 n 14 a b Silcox 2006 p 27 Murray 2006 p 21 Davis 1992 p xvi Nasgaard 1984 p 7 a b Silcox 2006 p 29 Murray 2003 p 17 Murray 2006 pp 25 26 O Brian 2007 pp 277 78 Harris 1926 pp 85 86 Harris 1929 p 182 Silcox 2006 pp 29 30 Silcox 2006 p 350 Silcox 2006 p 214 Bice amp Mastin 1990 p 96 The Group of Seven a b c d e Murray 1990 p 155 a b c Murray 2006 p 17 Silcox 2006 p 96 Bice amp Mastin 1990 p 89 Silcox 2006 p 76 a b Moran 2020 p 289 a b Murray 1990 p 159 a b Zemans 2000 quoted in Zemans 2007 p 205 Bice amp Mastin 1990 p 93 a b c Silcox 2006 p 31 Murray 2006 p 13 Franklin Carmichael Biography www manorhillfineart com Archived from the original on January 3 2018 Retrieved February 21 2018 a b Murray 2006 pp 32 33 Murray 2006 pp 30 31 Roza 1997 46 n 14 a b Murray 2006 pp 36 37 Murray 2006 pp 42 43 Mastin 1990 pp 106 108 a b Murray 2006 pp 40 41 Murray 2006 pp 44 45 works cowleyabbott ca Cowley Abbott Auction Important Canadian amp International Art December 6th 2023 Retrieved October 26 2023 Bice amp Mastin 1990 p 70 Murray 2006 p 23 Murray 2006 pp 38 39 a b c Bice amp Mastin 1990 p 72 a b Donegan 2007 p 147 Waddington amp Waddington 2016 p 226 a b Waddington amp Waddington 2016 p 224 New 2002 p 132 Carr 1966 p 13 McMann Evelyn 1981 Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Toronto University of Toronto Press Retrieved June 2 2022 Members since 1880 Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Archived from the original on May 26 2011 Retrieved September 11 2013 Bice amp Mastin 1990 Murray 1990 p 156 In Carmichael s works of the 1930s he managed the structure but at the same time began to overwork and overfinish This killed him as a painter of larger works Mainly he could not relax in the large works the fear of being not good enough may have been too great Murray 1990 p 159 For Carmichael watercolour was the supreme art one attuned to his subtlest impulse He was a subtle man All the more reason therefore for this comprehensive exhibition to have included more watercolours Here where Carmichael was sublime we were offered only a sampling Milroy Sarah January 12 2002 A portrait of two artists in one The Globe and Mail Retrieved February 26 2018 CBC News May 25 2012 Modern and traditional art scores at Joyner auction Buyers snap up Group of Seven contemporary works in Toronto Archived from the original on June 3 2015 Retrieved May 30 2015 Boswell Randy April 28 2012 Group of Seven painting expected to fetch 350 000 Postmedia News Archived from the original on May 2 2012 Sources edit Bice Megan Mastin Mary Carmichael 1990 Light and Shadow The Work of Franklin Carmichael McMichael Canadian Art Collection ISBN 978 0 7729 6739 8 Carr Emily 1966 Meeting with the Group of Seven 1927 Hundreds and Thousands The Journals of an Artist Toronto Irwin Publishing ISBN 0 7725 1617 0 Davis Ann 1992 The Logic of Ecstasy Canadian Mystical Painting 1920 1940 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 6861 3 Donegan Rosemary 2007 Modernism and the Industrial Imagination Copper Cliff and the Sudbury Basin In O Brian John White Peter eds Beyond Wilderness The Group of Seven Canadian Identity and Contemporary Art Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 3244 1 Harris Lawren July 15 1926 Revelation of Art in Canada Canadian Theosophist 7 5 1929 Creative Art and Canada In Bertram ed Yearbook of the Arts in Canada 1928 1929 Toronto Macmillan of Canada Hill Charles 2002 Tom Thomson Painter In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Douglas amp McIntyre pp 111 143 Jackson A Y 1958 A Painter s Country Toronto Clarke Irwin MacDonald J E H J E H MacDonald fonds ID MG30 D111 Ottawa Library and Archives Canada King Ross 2010 Defiant Spirits The Modernist Revolution of the Group of Seven D amp M Publishers ISBN 978 1 55365 807 8 Klages Gregory 2016 The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson Separating Fact from Fiction Toronto Dundurn Press ISBN 978 1 4597 3196 7 Larisey Peter S J 1993 Light for a Cold Land Lawren Harris s Work and Life An Interpretation Toronto Dundurn Mastin Mary Charmichael 1990 The La Cloche Decision In Bice Megan Mastin Mary Carmichael eds Light and Shadow The Work of Franklin Carmichael McMichael Canadian Art Collection pp 106 111 ISBN 978 0 7729 6739 8 Mellen Peter 1970 The Group of Seven Toronto McClelland and Stewart ISBN 978 0 7710 5815 8 Moran Kristine 2020 Gambit 1 In Dejardin Ian A C Milroy Sarah eds A Like Vision The Group of Seven amp Tom Thomson Fredericton Goose Lane Editions p 289 ISBN 978 1 77310 205 4 Murray Joan Summer 1990 Carmichael s Triumph Journal of Canadian Studies 25 2 155 59 doi 10 3138 jcs 25 2 155 S2CID 151323505 2006 Rocks Franklin Carmichael Arthur Lismer and the Group of Seven Toronto McArthur amp Company ISBN 978 1 55278 616 1 Nasgaard Roald 1984 The Mystic North Symbolist Landscape Painting in Northern Europe and North America 1890 1940 Toronto University of Toronto Press New William H 2002 Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 0761 2 O Brian John 2007 Beyond Wilderness The Group of Seven Canadian Identity and Contemporary Art McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 7558 5 Reid Dennis R 1971 A Bibliography of the Group of Seven Ottawa The National Gallery of Canada Roza Alexandra M 1997 Towards a Modern Canadian Art 1910 1936 The Group of Seven A J M Smith and F R Scott PDF Thesis McGill University Silcox David P 2006 The Group of Seven and Tom Thomson Toronto Firefly Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 55407 154 8 Waddington Jim Waddington Sue 2016 In the Footsteps of the Group of Seven paperback ed Fredericton Goose Lane Editions ISBN 978 0 86492 891 7 Zemans Joyce October 9 2000 What would the Group of Seven Say The Globe and Mail Retrieved December 20 2020 2007 What Would the Group of Seven Say In O Brian John White Peter eds Beyond Wilderness The Group of Seven Canadian Identity and Contemporary Art Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 3244 1 Further reading editCarmichael Franklin 1978 A Portfolio of Drawings Hearst University College of Hearst Franklin Carmichael Memorial Exhibition Toronto Art Gallery of Toronto 1947 Franklin Carmichael Prints gravures Kleinburg McMichael Canadian Art Collection 1984 Harper John Russell 1977 Painting in Canada A History 2nd ed Toronto Univ of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 6307 1 Mastin Catherine M 1992 Thorn Apple Tree Book Illustrations by Franklin Carmichael Exhibition catalogue 1 folded sheet Windsor Art Gallery of Windsor 1995 Franklin Carmichael New Views on Canadian Art series Kingston Quarry Press 2001 Portrait of a Spiritualist Franklin Carmichael and the National Gallery of Canada Collection Ottawa National Gallery of Canada Murray Joan 2003 Lawren Harris An Introduction to his Life and Art Toronto Firefly Books Retrieved May 6 2021 Reid Dennis 1988 A Concise History of Canadian Painting 2nd ed Toronto Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195444575 Thom Ian M 1981 Franklin Carmichael Watercolours Exhibition catalogue Victoria Art Gallery of Greater Victoria External links edit nbsp Media related to Franklin Carmichael at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franklin Carmichael amp oldid 1215587101, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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