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J. E. H. MacDonald

James Edward Hervey MacDonald RCA (1873–1932) was an English-Canadian artist, best known as a member of the Group of Seven who asserted a distinct national identity combined with a common heritage stemming from early modernism in Europe in the early twentieth century.[1] He was the father of the illustrator, graphic artist and designer Thoreau MacDonald.

J. E. H. MacDonald
MacDonald in 1930
Born
James Edward Hervey MacDonald

(1873-05-12)12 May 1873
Durham, England
Died26 November 1932(1932-11-26) (aged 59)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Education
Known forPainter
Notable work
  • The Tangled Garden (1916)
  • The Solemn Land (1921)
MovementGroup of Seven
SpouseHarriet Joan Lavis (m. 1899)

Life edit

Early years edit

MacDonald was born on 12 May 1873 near Durham, England,[1] to an English mother, Margaret (Usher), and a Canadian father,[2] William MacDonald, who was a cabinetmaker.[3][4] In 1887 at the age of 14, he immigrated with his family to Hamilton, Ontario.[5] That year he began his first training as an artist at the Hamilton Art School,[1] where he studied under John Ireland and Arthur Heming.[3] In 1889, they moved again to Toronto, where he studied commercial art and became active in the Toronto Art Students' League, a society which believed in sketching out-of-doors. He continued his training at the Central Ontario School of Art and Design, where he studied with George Agnew Reid and William Cruikshank.[1][3]

In 1894 or 1895, MacDonald took a position as a commercial designer at Grip Ltd., an important commercial art firm, where he further developed his design skills. In the coming years, he encouraged his colleagues—including future artist Tom Thomson—to develop their skills as painters.[1] In 1899, MacDonald married Joan Lavis, and two years later they had a son, Thoreau.[5] MacDonald worked as a designer at Grip Ltd. until 1903, then at Carlton Studios in London from 1903 to 1907, and returned to Grip Ltd. in 1907.[3] Whilst at Carlton, he worked with Norman Mills Price, William Tracy Wallace, and Albert Angus Turbayne.

Early career as an artist edit

In 1911, MacDonald resigned his designer position at Grip Ltd. and moved with his wife and child to Thornhill, Ontario, to pursue a career as a landscape artist.[6] To supplement his income, he worked occasionally as a freelance designer until 1921.[3] After developing his own style as a painter, he organized a show of his work at the Arts and Letters Club of Toronto in November 1911.[6] Fellow artist Lawren Harris—a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts—was so impressed with MacDonald's work that he asked if they could work together.[6] Harris encouraged MacDonald to continue painting and show his work whenever possible. The following year they organized their first joint exhibition. In 1912, MacDonald was widely recognized for his contributions to an exhibition at the Ontario Society of Artists.

In January 1913, MacDonald and Harris traveled to the Albright Art Gallery, today's Albright-Knox Gallery, in Buffalo, New York, where they attended the Exhibition of Contemporary Scandinavian Art and saw post-Impressionist and expressionist landscape paintings by artists such as Gustaf Fjaestad and Vilhelm Hammershøi.[7] The two artists felt that the approach to the northern Scandinavian wilderness could be adopted by Canadian painters to create on canvas a truly Canadian form of landscape art.[1] Later that year, commercial artists based in Toronto began to show interest in the potential of original Canadian expression; these artists began to congregate around MacDonald and Harris. In the spring of 1913, MacDonald wrote to A. Y. Jackson, inviting him to come to Toronto, which he did in May.

MacDonald created the poster Canada and the Call (1914) soon after the outbreak of the First World War. Intended as a promotional poster for the Canadian Patriotic Fund, Canada and the Call advertises an exhibition of paintings organized by the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.[8]

In March 1916, MacDonald exhibited The Tangled Garden at the Ontario Society of Artists. Though derided by art critics of the day, it was a fairly conventional post-impressionistic painting of sunflowers—one that recalls Vincent van Gogh's treatment of the subject from nearly forty years before, but in which MacDonald would have relied on sketches of sunflowers he made in his own garden at Thornhill, Ontario.[9] Accustomed to the smooth blending and muted tones of Canadian academic art in the style of the Canadian Art Club, the critics were taken aback by the brightness and intensity of the colours. The art critic for the Toronto Daily Star called it "an incoherent mass of color".[10] Hostile art critics thereafter singled out MacDonald for attacks in the press.[11]

In the autumn of 1918, MacDonald, Harris, and other artists interested in their new Canadian approach to painting travelled to the Algoma district north of Lake Superior in a specially outfitted Algoma Central Railway car that functioned as a mobile artist studio. The group would hitch their car to trains travelling through the area, and when they found a scenic location, they would unhitch and spend time exploring and painting the wilderness.[6] MacDonald would return to Algoma with his colleagues for the next several autumns.[6] These trips would produce some of his most acclaimed paintings, including Mist Fantasy, Sand River, Algoma (1920) and The Solemn Land (1921), elegant works that are meditations on his longtime experience in design combined with fiery colour.[1]

Group of Seven edit

In 1920, MacDonald co-founded the Group of Seven, which dedicated itself to promoting a distinct Canadian art developed through direct contact with the Canadian landscape.[12] The other founding members were Frederick Varley, A. Y. Jackson, Lawren Harris, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, and Franklin Carmichael.[13] MacDonald had worked with Lismer, Varley, Johnston, and Carmichael at the design firm Grip Ltd. in Toronto. Together they initiated what they asserted was the first major Canadian national art movement, producing paintings directly inspired by the Canadian landscape.[14] In 1921, MacDonald was appointed instructor in decorative art and commercial design at the Ontario College of Art and his teaching commitments somewhat curtailed his painting activities.[15] However, every summer from 1924 until 1930, MacDonald travelled to the Canadian Rockies to paint the mountain landscapes that dominated his later work.

Later years edit

From 1928 until his death MacDonald served as the Principal of the Ontario College of Art, and he painted with less frequency and less consistent success.

Today, MacDonald is viewed with general admiration for his art, with one writer commenting, "no Canadian landscape painter possessed a richer command of colour and pigment than J. E. H. MacDonald ... His brushwork is at once disciplined and vigorous. His best on-the-spot sketches possess an intensity and freshness of execution not dissimilar from Van Gogh."[16] His former home and 4-acre (16,000 m2) garden in Vaughan, Ontario have been restored. Owned by the City of Vaughan, they are open to the public.[17]

MacDonald suffered a stroke in 1931, and spent the following summer recovering in Barbados.[18] He died in Toronto on 26 November 1932 at the age of 59. He was buried at Prospect Cemetery in Toronto.[19]

Legacy edit

On 8 June 1973 Canada Post issued 'J.E.H. MacDonald, painter, 1873–1932' designed by William Rueter based on MacDonald's Mist Fantasy, Northland (1922) in the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. The 15¢ stamps were printed by Ashton-Potter Limited.[20]

MacDonald has been designated as an Historic Person in the Directory of Federal Heritage Designations.[21]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Murray, Joan (2008). "J. E. H. MacDonald". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  2. ^ "J. E. H. MacDonald (1873–1932)". McMichael. Archived from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Collections: J. E. H. MacDonald". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  4. ^ Stacey, Robert; Bishop, Hunter (15 October 1996). J.E.H. MacDonald, Designer. ISBN 9780773595910.
  5. ^ a b Christensen, Lisa (2003). The Lake O'Hara Art of J. E. H. MacDonald Hiker's Guide. Calgary: Fifth House Ltd. p. 2. ISBN 978-1894856171.
  6. ^ a b c d e . Canada History. Archived from the original on 23 October 2018. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  7. ^ "Exhibition of Scandinavian Contemporary Art". newyorkpubliclibrary.com. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  8. ^ Brandon, Laura (2021). War Art in Canada: A Critical History. Toronto: Art Canada Institute. ISBN 978-1-4871-0271-5.
  9. ^ Bradfield, Helen (1970). Art Gallery of Ontario: the Canadian Collection. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Company. pp. 272–273. ISBN 0070925046. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  10. ^ Fairbairn, Margaret (11 March 1916). "Some Pictures at the Art Gallery". Toronto Daily Star. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  11. ^ Robson, Albert H. (1937). J. E. H. MacDonald, R.C.A. Toronto: Rous and Mann Limited. p. 9.
  12. ^ Housser, F. B. (1926). A Canadian Art Movement: The Story of the Group of Seven. Toronto: Macmillan Co. of Canada. p. 24. ISBN 978-0770512057.
  13. ^ Varley, Christopher (2013). "Group of Seven". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  14. ^ Chilvers, Ian; Glaves-Smith, John (2010). A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199239665.
  15. ^ Hill, Charles C. "Article". cowleyabbott.ca. Cowley Abbott Auction. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  16. ^ Paul Duval, J.E.H. Macdonald biography in The McMichael Canadian Collection, Kleinburg, Ontario, 1979. p. 51
  17. ^ City of Vaughan, "J.E.H./Thoreau MacDonald House" 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Leigh, Brandi (2008). "J. E. H. MacDonald". The Art History Archive. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  19. ^ Mount Pleasant Group
  20. ^ Canada Post stamp
  21. ^ "Directory of Federal Heritage Designations". Parks Canada. Retrieved 29 May 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Christensen, Lisa (2003). The Lake O'Hara Art of J. E. H. MacDonald and Hiker's Guide. Calgary: Fifth House Ltd. ISBN 978-1894856171.
  • Duval, Paul (1978). The Tangled Garden: The Works of J. E. H. MacDonald. Cerebrus Publishing. ISBN 978-0920016084.
  • Helwig, Kate; Douglas, Alison (2024). J.E.H. MacDonald: Up Close. Fredericton, NB: Goose Lane Editions. ISBN 9781773104157. Retrieved 27 January 2024.
  • Hill, Charles C. (1995). The Group of Seven: Art for a Nation. Toronto: National Gallery of Canada. ISBN 978-0771067167.
  • Murray, Joan (2002). Flowers: J. E. H. MacDonald, Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. McArthur & Company. ISBN 978-1552783269.
  • Reid, Dennis (2012). A Concise History of Canadian Painting (Third ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195444568.
  • Bruce Whitman. J. E. H. MacDonald. Kingston: Quarry Press, 1995.

External links edit

  • CBC Digital Archives - The Group of Seven: Painters in the Wilderness
  • Thoreau and J.E.H. MacDonald fonds at the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario
  • Brandon, Laura. War Art in Canada: A Critical History. Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2021.

macdonald, james, edward, hervey, macdonald, 1873, 1932, english, canadian, artist, best, known, member, group, seven, asserted, distinct, national, identity, combined, with, common, heritage, stemming, from, early, modernism, europe, early, twentieth, century. James Edward Hervey MacDonald RCA 1873 1932 was an English Canadian artist best known as a member of the Group of Seven who asserted a distinct national identity combined with a common heritage stemming from early modernism in Europe in the early twentieth century 1 He was the father of the illustrator graphic artist and designer Thoreau MacDonald J E H MacDonaldMacDonald in 1930BornJames Edward Hervey MacDonald 1873 05 12 12 May 1873Durham EnglandDied26 November 1932 1932 11 26 aged 59 Toronto Ontario CanadaEducationHamilton Art School Central Ontario School of Art and DesignKnown forPainterNotable workThe Tangled Garden 1916 The Solemn Land 1921 MovementGroup of SevenSpouseHarriet Joan Lavis m 1899 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 Early career as an artist 1 3 Group of Seven 1 4 Later years 2 Legacy 3 References 3 1 Footnotes 3 2 Bibliography 4 External linksLife editEarly years edit MacDonald was born on 12 May 1873 near Durham England 1 to an English mother Margaret Usher and a Canadian father 2 William MacDonald who was a cabinetmaker 3 4 In 1887 at the age of 14 he immigrated with his family to Hamilton Ontario 5 That year he began his first training as an artist at the Hamilton Art School 1 where he studied under John Ireland and Arthur Heming 3 In 1889 they moved again to Toronto where he studied commercial art and became active in the Toronto Art Students League a society which believed in sketching out of doors He continued his training at the Central Ontario School of Art and Design where he studied with George Agnew Reid and William Cruikshank 1 3 In 1894 or 1895 MacDonald took a position as a commercial designer at Grip Ltd an important commercial art firm where he further developed his design skills In the coming years he encouraged his colleagues including future artist Tom Thomson to develop their skills as painters 1 In 1899 MacDonald married Joan Lavis and two years later they had a son Thoreau 5 MacDonald worked as a designer at Grip Ltd until 1903 then at Carlton Studios in London from 1903 to 1907 and returned to Grip Ltd in 1907 3 Whilst at Carlton he worked with Norman Mills Price William Tracy Wallace and Albert Angus Turbayne Early career as an artist edit In 1911 MacDonald resigned his designer position at Grip Ltd and moved with his wife and child to Thornhill Ontario to pursue a career as a landscape artist 6 To supplement his income he worked occasionally as a freelance designer until 1921 3 After developing his own style as a painter he organized a show of his work at the Arts and Letters Club of Toronto in November 1911 6 Fellow artist Lawren Harris a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts was so impressed with MacDonald s work that he asked if they could work together 6 Harris encouraged MacDonald to continue painting and show his work whenever possible The following year they organized their first joint exhibition In 1912 MacDonald was widely recognized for his contributions to an exhibition at the Ontario Society of Artists In January 1913 MacDonald and Harris traveled to the Albright Art Gallery today s Albright Knox Gallery in Buffalo New York where they attended the Exhibition of Contemporary Scandinavian Art and saw post Impressionist and expressionist landscape paintings by artists such as Gustaf Fjaestad and Vilhelm Hammershoi 7 The two artists felt that the approach to the northern Scandinavian wilderness could be adopted by Canadian painters to create on canvas a truly Canadian form of landscape art 1 Later that year commercial artists based in Toronto began to show interest in the potential of original Canadian expression these artists began to congregate around MacDonald and Harris In the spring of 1913 MacDonald wrote to A Y Jackson inviting him to come to Toronto which he did in May MacDonald created the poster Canada and the Call 1914 soon after the outbreak of the First World War Intended as a promotional poster for the Canadian Patriotic Fund Canada and the Call advertises an exhibition of paintings organized by the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts 8 In March 1916 MacDonald exhibited The Tangled Garden at the Ontario Society of Artists Though derided by art critics of the day it was a fairly conventional post impressionistic painting of sunflowers one that recalls Vincent van Gogh s treatment of the subject from nearly forty years before but in which MacDonald would have relied on sketches of sunflowers he made in his own garden at Thornhill Ontario 9 Accustomed to the smooth blending and muted tones of Canadian academic art in the style of the Canadian Art Club the critics were taken aback by the brightness and intensity of the colours The art critic for the Toronto Daily Star called it an incoherent mass of color 10 Hostile art critics thereafter singled out MacDonald for attacks in the press 11 In the autumn of 1918 MacDonald Harris and other artists interested in their new Canadian approach to painting travelled to the Algoma district north of Lake Superior in a specially outfitted Algoma Central Railway car that functioned as a mobile artist studio The group would hitch their car to trains travelling through the area and when they found a scenic location they would unhitch and spend time exploring and painting the wilderness 6 MacDonald would return to Algoma with his colleagues for the next several autumns 6 These trips would produce some of his most acclaimed paintings including Mist Fantasy Sand River Algoma 1920 and The Solemn Land 1921 elegant works that are meditations on his longtime experience in design combined with fiery colour 1 nbsp Tracks and Traffic 1912 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Fine Weather Georgian Bay 1913 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp The Supply Boat 1915 16 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Leaves In the Brook 1919 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp The Tangled Garden 1916 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa OntarioGroup of Seven edit Main article Group of Seven artists In 1920 MacDonald co founded the Group of Seven which dedicated itself to promoting a distinct Canadian art developed through direct contact with the Canadian landscape 12 The other founding members were Frederick Varley A Y Jackson Lawren Harris Frank Johnston Arthur Lismer and Franklin Carmichael 13 MacDonald had worked with Lismer Varley Johnston and Carmichael at the design firm Grip Ltd in Toronto Together they initiated what they asserted was the first major Canadian national art movement producing paintings directly inspired by the Canadian landscape 14 In 1921 MacDonald was appointed instructor in decorative art and commercial design at the Ontario College of Art and his teaching commitments somewhat curtailed his painting activities 15 However every summer from 1924 until 1930 MacDonald travelled to the Canadian Rockies to paint the mountain landscapes that dominated his later work nbsp Falls Montreal River 1920 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Algoma Waterfall 1920 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Moose Lake Algoma 1920 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Forest Wilderness 1921 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Lake McArthur Yoho Park 1924 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Lodge Interior Lake O Hara c 1925 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Cathedral Mountain 1927 private collection nbsp The Solemn Land 1921 National Gallery of Canada OttawaLater years edit From 1928 until his death MacDonald served as the Principal of the Ontario College of Art and he painted with less frequency and less consistent success Today MacDonald is viewed with general admiration for his art with one writer commenting no Canadian landscape painter possessed a richer command of colour and pigment than J E H MacDonald His brushwork is at once disciplined and vigorous His best on the spot sketches possess an intensity and freshness of execution not dissimilar from Van Gogh 16 His former home and 4 acre 16 000 m2 garden in Vaughan Ontario have been restored Owned by the City of Vaughan they are open to the public 17 MacDonald suffered a stroke in 1931 and spent the following summer recovering in Barbados 18 He died in Toronto on 26 November 1932 at the age of 59 He was buried at Prospect Cemetery in Toronto 19 nbsp Dark Autumn Rocky Mountains 1930 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Ontario nbsp Aurora Georgian Bay 1931 McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Mount Lefroy 1932 National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Ontario nbsp Mountain Solitude Lake Oesa 1932 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Ontario nbsp Goat Range Rocky Mountains 1932 McMichael Canadian Art Collection KleinburgLegacy editOn 8 June 1973 Canada Post issued J E H MacDonald painter 1873 1932 designed by William Rueter based on MacDonald s Mist Fantasy Northland 1922 in the Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto The 15 stamps were printed by Ashton Potter Limited 20 MacDonald has been designated as an Historic Person in the Directory of Federal Heritage Designations 21 References editFootnotes edit a b c d e f g Murray Joan 2008 J E H MacDonald The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 22 September 2021 J E H MacDonald 1873 1932 McMichael Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 1 February 2014 a b c d e Collections J E H MacDonald National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2 February 2014 Stacey Robert Bishop Hunter 15 October 1996 J E H MacDonald Designer ISBN 9780773595910 a b Christensen Lisa 2003 The Lake O Hara Art of J E H MacDonald Hiker s Guide Calgary Fifth House Ltd p 2 ISBN 978 1894856171 a b c d e J E H MacDonald Canada History Archived from the original on 23 October 2018 Retrieved 1 February 2014 Exhibition of Scandinavian Contemporary Art newyorkpubliclibrary com Retrieved 28 May 2020 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Bradfield Helen 1970 Art Gallery of Ontario the Canadian Collection Toronto McGraw Hill Company pp 272 273 ISBN 0070925046 Retrieved 25 May 2020 Fairbairn Margaret 11 March 1916 Some Pictures at the Art Gallery Toronto Daily Star Retrieved 1 February 2014 Robson Albert H 1937 J E H MacDonald R C A Toronto Rous and Mann Limited p 9 Housser F B 1926 A Canadian Art Movement The Story of the Group of Seven Toronto Macmillan Co of Canada p 24 ISBN 978 0770512057 Varley Christopher 2013 Group of Seven The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2 February 2014 Chilvers Ian Glaves Smith John 2010 A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199239665 Hill Charles C Article cowleyabbott ca Cowley Abbott Auction Retrieved 3 July 2023 Paul Duval J E H Macdonald biography in The McMichael Canadian Collection Kleinburg Ontario 1979 p 51 City of Vaughan J E H Thoreau MacDonald House Archived 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Leigh Brandi 2008 J E H MacDonald The Art History Archive Retrieved 21 August 2014 Mount Pleasant Group Canada Post stamp Directory of Federal Heritage Designations Parks Canada Retrieved 29 May 2022 Bibliography edit Christensen Lisa 2003 The Lake O Hara Art of J E H MacDonald and Hiker s Guide Calgary Fifth House Ltd ISBN 978 1894856171 Duval Paul 1978 The Tangled Garden The Works of J E H MacDonald Cerebrus Publishing ISBN 978 0920016084 Helwig Kate Douglas Alison 2024 J E H MacDonald Up Close Fredericton NB Goose Lane Editions ISBN 9781773104157 Retrieved 27 January 2024 Hill Charles C 1995 The Group of Seven Art for a Nation Toronto National Gallery of Canada ISBN 978 0771067167 Murray Joan 2002 Flowers J E H MacDonald Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven McArthur amp Company ISBN 978 1552783269 Reid Dennis 2012 A Concise History of Canadian Painting Third ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195444568 Bruce Whitman J E H MacDonald Kingston Quarry Press 1995 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to J E H MacDonald CBC Digital Archives The Group of Seven Painters in the Wilderness Thoreau and J E H MacDonald fonds at the National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Ontario Brandon Laura War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J E H MacDonald amp oldid 1199634456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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