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Laurence Hyde (artist)

Laurence Evelyn Hyde (6 June 1914 – 8 August 1987) was an English-born Canadian film maker, painter, and graphic artist, known for his work with the National Film Board of Canada, stamp designs for the Canadian Postal Service, and the wordless novel Southern Cross (1951).

Laurence Hyde
Hyde in 1945
Born
Laurence Evelyn Hyde

6 June 1914 (1914-06-06)
Died8 August 1987(1987-08-08) (aged 73)
Canada

Life edit

Hyde was born in the United Kingdom at Kingston upon Thames (near London), but immigrated to Canada with his parents in 1926. Settling in Toronto, Hyde was drawn to the arts by exhibits at the Art Gallery of Toronto (now the Art Gallery of Ontario) and especially seeing Lawren Harris' North Shore, Lake Superior. "That was the first one that made a great impression on me and it's then that I became really serious about art."[1] He began attending night classes at Toronto's Central Technical High School where his teachers included Carl Schaefer and Charles Goldhamer. In the early 1930s, Hyde took up wood engraving, and other forms of block engraving, his work often appearing as illustrations or cover art for left-wing publications, such as New Advance and New Frontier.[2] In 1942, Hyde moved to Ottawa, joining the National Film Board of Canada under John Grierson and worked at the NFB until his retirement in 1972. Hyde was married in 1939 to Bettye Marguerite Bambridge, and had two sons, Anthony Hyde (1946– ) and Christopher (1949–2014), both novelists.

Work edit

Film edit

Hyde's film-making at the NFB fell into two periods. Beginning in 1945, he directed a number of films in typical NFB documentary style, including Fur Trade (1946, produced by Harry Campbell), Bronco Busters (1946, about the Calgary Stampede) and Art for Everybody (1948, produced by Sydney Newman, part of the Canada Carries On series). During the McCarthyite period, people identified as having left-wing political affiliations were not permitted to hold positions normally given film credits, thereby compelling many film-makers to leave the Board, and forcing Hyde out of film production into the Board's promotion department, where he spent the next seventeen years. He returned to film-making in 1967 with the first of the Tuktu series, which eventually included thirteen documentary films for children based around the life of an Inuit boy and his family. These films were very successful, distributed worldwide, and were recognised at the 21st Venice Biennale. Hyde also made more conventional documentaries, such as Tugboat (1968), Family House (1970, based on an essay by the architect Humphrey Carver) and City Limits (1971, an exploration of the North American city through the eyes of Jane Jacobs.)

Philatelic edit

Hyde was introduced to the possibilities of postage stamp design by Emanuel Hahn, who designed several Canadian coins and stamps, and whom Hyde met while making the NFB documentary, Third Dimension (1947), a survey of Canadian sculpture. He was also interested in the techniques of steel engraving (still in use for stamps at that time), and wrote about them in Canadian Art. Between 1954 and 1957 he produced eight stamps for the Post Office of Canada: 1954, a 15¢ airmail stamp depicting a gannet in flight; 1955, a 5¢ stamp commemorating the 50th anniversary of Alberta and Saskatchewan joining the Canadian Confederation; 1955, a 5¢ stamp honouring the 8th World Scout Jamboree, at Niagara-on-the-Lake, the first held outside Europe; 1957, a series of 5¢ stamps, illustrating Canadian recreational activities—fishing; swimming; hunting; skiing; and in 1957 a 5¢ stamp of the common loon, described by a reviewer as possessing "the rare combination of delicate treatment and rugged clarity that is appropriate to a stamp size picture".[3][4][5]

Books and book illustrations edit

Hyde wrote and illustrated a children's book, Brave Davy Coon, and published (but did not illustrate) two juvenile novels, Under the Pirate Flag and Captain Deadlock. He contributed illustrations and decorations to many books, such as A Pocketful of Canada[6] and early editions of the poetry of Jay Macpherson (O Earth Return, 1954, Toronto), Daryl Hine (Five Poems, 1954, Toronto), and Dorothy Livesay (New Poems, 1954, Toronto). He provided nine major wood engravings for William E. Greening's[7] The Ottawa and many smaller engravings for Canada's First Bank: A History of the Bank of Montreal, by Merril Dennison.[8]

Wood engravings and Southern Cross edit

Although Hyde worked in many media—he also produced easel paintings throughout his career—he is best known for his wood engravings. Wood engravings are distinguished from woodcuts by being engraved on blocks composed of end grain pieces of hard, fine-grained woods, such as boxwood or pear later, thus enabling complex images with very fine lines to be produced.[9] Hyde became interested in this technique while at Central Tech, and made his first engravings under the influence of British artists such at Paul Nash and Eric Gill, and the American, Rockwell Kent. In 1934 Hyde produced, Discovery, a series of engravings (at least fifty-one) telling the story of the Viking discovery of America, and in 1937 a portfolio of illustrations for Macbeth (Golden Dog Press, Toronto). His most important work in the media was created between 1948 and 1951, Southern Cross, "A Novel of the South Seas, Told in Wood Engravings". Using 118 wood engravings, Hyde tells a story based around the tests of the hydrogen bomb made by the United States at the Bikini Atoll in 1946. The inspiration of book was clearly political, and the book has been called "a political marker of the Cold War years". It is—as Rockwell Kent says in his introduction the book—the work of "a master of the difficult and infinitely laborious art of wood engraving".[10]

Two complete editions of "Southern Cross" were printed by the artist; one is held by the National Gallery of Canada and the other by the Burnaby Art Gallery.[11] A reprint edition of Southern Cross has been issued by Drawn & Quarterly and the entire novel has also been republished in Graphic Witness, edited by George A. Walker[12] in company with works by Frans Masereel, Lynd Ward, and Giacomo Patri, so that the work can be seen in historical context. The novel, with a large selection of illustrations, is carefully considered in a major critical work, Wordless Books: The Original Graphic Novels, by wordless novel historian David A. Beronä.[13] In a review of Graphic Witness, Lance Eaton states, "Hyde incorporates curve and circular cuts into his work much more extensively, as well as providing layers within his work."[14] Hyde's later work included a portfolio of engravings for Tolstoy's War and Peace in 1986.

Hyde's career was the subject of a major retrospective at the Glenbow Museum, Calgary, in 1986, and was accompanied by a monograph, The Wood Engravings of Laurence Hyde, by the curator Patricia Ainslie.

The principal collections of Hyde's work are in the Glenbow Museum,[15] Calgary, the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, and the Burnaby Art Gallery, with other important collections in the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg, Ontario, and the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. His work is also represented in the Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, the Vancouver Art Gallery, The Robert McLaughlin Gallery,[16] The Concordia Art Gallery, Montreal, and the Library of Congress.

Selected works edit

  • Tuktu Series[17]
  • Stamp Design - 15 cents, gannet 1954; 5 cents, Alberta and Saskatchewan 50th Anniversary as provinces, 1955; 5 cents, Boy Scout World Jamboree, 1955; 5 cents fishing, 1957; 5 cents swimming, 1957; 5 cents, hunting, 1957; 5 cents, skiing, 1957; 5 cents, common loon, 1957
  • Southern Cross - Laurence Hyde, Southern Cross, 1951, Ward Ritchie Press, Los Angeles.

References edit

  1. ^ Ainslie, Patricia (21 October 1985). "Patricia Ainslie Interview with Laurence Hyde". The Devil's Artisan. 21: 7.
  2. ^ Purdy, Sean (27 April – 10 July 1998). Radicals and Revolutionaries: The History of Canadian Communism From the Robert S. Kenny Collection. An Exhibition Held At The Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto. pp. 63–64.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ W.M. Gladish, quoted in The Wood Engravings of Laurence Hyde, Patricia Ainslie, Glenbow Museum, Calgary, 1986.
  4. ^ Abra, Bob (18 February 1954). "Uses "Neglected" Bird For New Stamp Design". Ottawa Citizen. p. 20.
  5. ^ Laurence Hyde, "New Stamps for Old" p. 133, Canadian Art Vol XI, No.4, Summer 1954
  6. ^ John D. Robins (ed.) A Pocketful of Canada, 1946, Collins, Toronto.
  7. ^ William E. Greening, The Ottawa, 1961, McClelland and Stewart, Toronto.
  8. ^ Merril Dennison, Canada's First Bank: A History of the Bank of Montreal, 1961, McClelland and Stewart, Toronto.
  9. ^ In Hyde's own library the principal reference on engraving technique was John Farleigh, The Graven Image, 1940, Macmillan and Co., London. The book is available as print-on-demand from Nabu Press, the United States. An excellent modern outline of wood cutting techniques is George A. Walker, The Woodcut Artist's Handbook, 2nd Ed., 2005, Firefly Books, Toronto.
  10. ^ p. 4, Rockewell Kent, Introduction to Southern Cross.
  11. ^ DeFina, Carol. "Laurence Hyde: Southern Cross," in Laurence Hyde: Southern Cross, Burnaby: Burnaby Art Gallery, 1986.
  12. ^ George A. Walker, Graphic Witness: Four Wordless Graphic Novels, 2007, Firefly Books, Toronto.
  13. ^ Wordless Books: The Original Graphic Novels, by David A. Beronä, 2008, Abrams, New York.
  14. ^ Eaton, Lance. Curled Up With A Good Book: [1] 2007
  15. ^ Glenbow Museum
  16. ^ The Robert McLaughlin Gallery Archived 7 April 2013 at archive.today
  17. ^ "Laurence Hyde - NFB". Nfb.ca. Retrieved 18 February 2017.

laurence, hyde, artist, laurence, evelyn, hyde, june, 1914, august, 1987, english, born, canadian, film, maker, painter, graphic, artist, known, work, with, national, film, board, canada, stamp, designs, canadian, postal, service, wordless, novel, southern, cr. Laurence Evelyn Hyde 6 June 1914 8 August 1987 was an English born Canadian film maker painter and graphic artist known for his work with the National Film Board of Canada stamp designs for the Canadian Postal Service and the wordless novel Southern Cross 1951 Laurence HydeHyde in 1945BornLaurence Evelyn Hyde6 June 1914 1914 06 06 Kingston upon Thames Surrey EnglandDied8 August 1987 1987 08 08 aged 73 Canada Contents 1 Life 2 Work 2 1 Film 2 2 Philatelic 2 3 Books and book illustrations 2 4 Wood engravings and Southern Cross 2 5 Selected works 3 ReferencesLife editHyde was born in the United Kingdom at Kingston upon Thames near London but immigrated to Canada with his parents in 1926 Settling in Toronto Hyde was drawn to the arts by exhibits at the Art Gallery of Toronto now the Art Gallery of Ontario and especially seeing Lawren Harris North Shore Lake Superior That was the first one that made a great impression on me and it s then that I became really serious about art 1 He began attending night classes at Toronto s Central Technical High School where his teachers included Carl Schaefer and Charles Goldhamer In the early 1930s Hyde took up wood engraving and other forms of block engraving his work often appearing as illustrations or cover art for left wing publications such as New Advance and New Frontier 2 In 1942 Hyde moved to Ottawa joining the National Film Board of Canada under John Grierson and worked at the NFB until his retirement in 1972 Hyde was married in 1939 to Bettye Marguerite Bambridge and had two sons Anthony Hyde 1946 and Christopher 1949 2014 both novelists Work editFilm edit Hyde s film making at the NFB fell into two periods Beginning in 1945 he directed a number of films in typical NFB documentary style including Fur Trade 1946 produced by Harry Campbell Bronco Busters 1946 about the Calgary Stampede and Art for Everybody 1948 produced by Sydney Newman part of the Canada Carries On series During the McCarthyite period people identified as having left wing political affiliations were not permitted to hold positions normally given film credits thereby compelling many film makers to leave the Board and forcing Hyde out of film production into the Board s promotion department where he spent the next seventeen years He returned to film making in 1967 with the first of the Tuktu series which eventually included thirteen documentary films for children based around the life of an Inuit boy and his family These films were very successful distributed worldwide and were recognised at the 21st Venice Biennale Hyde also made more conventional documentaries such as Tugboat 1968 Family House 1970 based on an essay by the architect Humphrey Carver and City Limits 1971 an exploration of the North American city through the eyes of Jane Jacobs Philatelic edit Hyde was introduced to the possibilities of postage stamp design by Emanuel Hahn who designed several Canadian coins and stamps and whom Hyde met while making the NFB documentary Third Dimension 1947 a survey of Canadian sculpture He was also interested in the techniques of steel engraving still in use for stamps at that time and wrote about them in Canadian Art Between 1954 and 1957 he produced eight stamps for the Post Office of Canada 1954 a 15 airmail stamp depicting a gannet in flight 1955 a 5 stamp commemorating the 50th anniversary of Alberta and Saskatchewan joining the Canadian Confederation 1955 a 5 stamp honouring the 8th World Scout Jamboree at Niagara on the Lake the first held outside Europe 1957 a series of 5 stamps illustrating Canadian recreational activities fishing swimming hunting skiing and in 1957 a 5 stamp of the common loon described by a reviewer as possessing the rare combination of delicate treatment and rugged clarity that is appropriate to a stamp size picture 3 4 5 Books and book illustrations edit Hyde wrote and illustrated a children s book Brave Davy Coon and published but did not illustrate two juvenile novels Under the Pirate Flag and Captain Deadlock He contributed illustrations and decorations to many books such as A Pocketful of Canada 6 and early editions of the poetry of Jay Macpherson O Earth Return 1954 Toronto Daryl Hine Five Poems 1954 Toronto and Dorothy Livesay New Poems 1954 Toronto He provided nine major wood engravings for William E Greening s 7 The Ottawa and many smaller engravings for Canada s First Bank A History of the Bank of Montreal by Merril Dennison 8 Wood engravings and Southern Cross edit Although Hyde worked in many media he also produced easel paintings throughout his career he is best known for his wood engravings Wood engravings are distinguished from woodcuts by being engraved on blocks composed of end grain pieces of hard fine grained woods such as boxwood or pear later thus enabling complex images with very fine lines to be produced 9 Hyde became interested in this technique while at Central Tech and made his first engravings under the influence of British artists such at Paul Nash and Eric Gill and the American Rockwell Kent In 1934 Hyde produced Discovery a series of engravings at least fifty one telling the story of the Viking discovery of America and in 1937 a portfolio of illustrations for Macbeth Golden Dog Press Toronto His most important work in the media was created between 1948 and 1951 Southern Cross A Novel of the South Seas Told in Wood Engravings Using 118 wood engravings Hyde tells a story based around the tests of the hydrogen bomb made by the United States at the Bikini Atoll in 1946 The inspiration of book was clearly political and the book has been called a political marker of the Cold War years It is as Rockwell Kent says in his introduction the book the work of a master of the difficult and infinitely laborious art of wood engraving 10 Two complete editions of Southern Cross were printed by the artist one is held by the National Gallery of Canada and the other by the Burnaby Art Gallery 11 A reprint edition of Southern Cross has been issued by Drawn amp Quarterly and the entire novel has also been republished in Graphic Witness edited by George A Walker 12 in company with works by Frans Masereel Lynd Ward and Giacomo Patri so that the work can be seen in historical context The novel with a large selection of illustrations is carefully considered in a major critical work Wordless Books The Original Graphic Novels by wordless novel historian David A Berona 13 In a review of Graphic Witness Lance Eaton states Hyde incorporates curve and circular cuts into his work much more extensively as well as providing layers within his work 14 Hyde s later work included a portfolio of engravings for Tolstoy s War and Peace in 1986 Hyde s career was the subject of a major retrospective at the Glenbow Museum Calgary in 1986 and was accompanied by a monograph The Wood Engravings of Laurence Hyde by the curator Patricia Ainslie The principal collections of Hyde s work are in the Glenbow Museum 15 Calgary the National Gallery of Canada Ottawa and the Burnaby Art Gallery with other important collections in the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg Ontario and the Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto His work is also represented in the Fogg Art Museum Cambridge the Vancouver Art Gallery The Robert McLaughlin Gallery 16 The Concordia Art Gallery Montreal and the Library of Congress Selected works edit Tuktu Series 17 Stamp Design 15 cents gannet 1954 5 cents Alberta and Saskatchewan 50th Anniversary as provinces 1955 5 cents Boy Scout World Jamboree 1955 5 cents fishing 1957 5 cents swimming 1957 5 cents hunting 1957 5 cents skiing 1957 5 cents common loon 1957 Southern Cross Laurence Hyde Southern Cross 1951 Ward Ritchie Press Los Angeles References edit Ainslie Patricia 21 October 1985 Patricia Ainslie Interview with Laurence Hyde The Devil s Artisan 21 7 Purdy Sean 27 April 10 July 1998 Radicals and Revolutionaries The History of Canadian Communism From the Robert S Kenny Collection An Exhibition Held At The Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library University of Toronto pp 63 64 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link W M Gladish quoted in The Wood Engravings of Laurence Hyde Patricia Ainslie Glenbow Museum Calgary 1986 Abra Bob 18 February 1954 Uses Neglected Bird For New Stamp Design Ottawa Citizen p 20 Laurence Hyde New Stamps for Old p 133 Canadian Art Vol XI No 4 Summer 1954 John D Robins ed A Pocketful of Canada 1946 Collins Toronto William E Greening The Ottawa 1961 McClelland and Stewart Toronto Merril Dennison Canada s First Bank A History of the Bank of Montreal 1961 McClelland and Stewart Toronto In Hyde s own library the principal reference on engraving technique was John Farleigh The Graven Image 1940 Macmillan and Co London The book is available as print on demand from Nabu Press the United States An excellent modern outline of wood cutting techniques is George A Walker The Woodcut Artist s Handbook 2nd Ed 2005 Firefly Books Toronto p 4 Rockewell Kent Introduction to Southern Cross DeFina Carol Laurence Hyde Southern Cross in Laurence Hyde Southern Cross Burnaby Burnaby Art Gallery 1986 George A Walker Graphic Witness Four Wordless Graphic Novels 2007 Firefly Books Toronto Wordless Books The Original Graphic Novels by David A Berona 2008 Abrams New York Eaton Lance Curled Up With A Good Book 1 2007 Glenbow Museum The Robert McLaughlin Gallery Archived 7 April 2013 at archive today Laurence Hyde NFB Nfb ca Retrieved 18 February 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laurence Hyde artist amp oldid 1174783338, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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