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Tom Thomson

Thomas John Thomson (August 5, 1877 – July 8, 1917) was a Canadian artist active in the early 20th century. During his short career, he produced roughly 400 oil sketches on small wood panels and approximately 50 larger works on canvas. His works consist almost entirely of landscapes, depicting trees, skies, lakes, and rivers. He used broad brush strokes and a liberal application of paint to capture the beauty and colour of the Ontario landscape. Thomson's accidental death by drowning at 39 shortly before the founding of the Group of Seven is seen as a tragedy for Canadian art.

Tom Thomson
Thomson, c. 1910–1917
Born
Thomas John Thomson

(1877-08-05)August 5, 1877
DiedJuly 8, 1917(1917-07-08) (aged 39)
Canoe Lake, Algonquin Park, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeLeith United Church Cemetery, Grey County, Ontario, Canada
44°37′N 80°53′W / 44.62°N 80.88°W / 44.62; -80.88 (Leith United Church Cemetery)
NationalityCanadian
EducationSelf-taught[note 1]
Known forPainting
Notable work
Movement
The Jack Pine, Winter 1916–17. 127.9 × 139.8 cm. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
Black Spruce and Maple, Fall 1915. Sketch.[note 3] Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Raised in rural Ontario, Thomson was born into a large family of farmers and displayed no immediate artistic talent. He worked several jobs before attending a business college, eventually developing skills in penmanship and copperplate writing. At the turn of the 20th century, he was employed in Seattle and Toronto as a pen artist at several different photoengraving firms, including Grip Ltd. There he met those who eventually formed the Group of Seven, including J. E. H. MacDonald, Lawren Harris, Frederick Varley, Franklin Carmichael and Arthur Lismer. In May 1912, he visited Algonquin Park—a major public park and forest reservation in Central Ontario—for the first time. It was there that he acquired his first sketching equipment and, following MacDonald's advice, began to capture nature scenes. He became enraptured with the area and repeatedly returned, typically spending his winters in Toronto and the rest of the year in the Park. His earliest paintings were not outstanding technically, but showed a good grasp of composition and colour handling. His later paintings vary in composition and contain vivid colours and thickly applied paint. His later work has had a great influence on Canadian art—paintings such as The Jack Pine and The West Wind have taken a prominent place in the culture of Canada and are some of the country's most iconic works.

Thomson developed a reputation during his lifetime as a veritable outdoorsman, talented in both fishing and canoeing, although his skills in the latter have been contested. The circumstances of his drowning on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park, linked with his image as a master canoeist, led to unsubstantiated but persistent rumours that he had been murdered or committed suicide.

Although he died before the formal establishment of the Group of Seven, Thomson is often considered an unofficial member. His art is typically exhibited with the rest of the Group's, nearly all of which remains in Canada—mainly at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg and the Tom Thomson Art Gallery in Owen Sound.

Life edit

Early years edit

Thomas John "Tom" Thomson was born on August 5, 1877, in Claremont, Ontario,[6] the sixth of John and Margaret Thomson's ten children.[7] He was raised in Leith, Ontario, near Owen Sound, in the municipality of Meaford.[8] Thomson and his siblings enjoyed both drawing and painting, although he did not immediately display any major talents.[7] He was eventually taken out of school for a year because of ill health, including a respiratory problem variously described as "weak lungs" or "inflammatory rheumatism".[8][9] This gave him free time to explore the woods near his home and develop an appreciation of nature.[7]

The family were unsuccessful as farmers; both Thomson and his father often abandoned their chores to go hiking, hunting and fishing.[10] Thomson regularly went on walks in Toronto with Dr. William Brodie (1831–1909), his grandmother's first cousin.[11][12] Brodie was a well-known entomologist, ornithologist and botanist, and Thomson's sister Margaret later recounted that they collected specimens on long walks together.[13][14]

Thomson was also enthusiastic about sports, once breaking his toe while playing football.[8] He was an excellent swimmer and fisherman, inheriting his passion for the latter from his grandfather and father.[15] Like most of those in his community, he regularly attended church. Some stories say that he sketched in the hymn books during services and entertained his sisters with caricatures of their neighbours. His sisters later said that they had fun "guessing who they were", indicating that he was not necessarily adept at capturing people's likeness.[8]

 
Portrait of a young Tom Thomson, c. 1900

Each of Thomson's nine siblings received an inheritance from their paternal grandfather.[15] Thomson received $2000 in 1898 but seems to have spent it quickly.[16] A year later, he entered a machine shop apprenticeship at an iron foundry owned by William Kennedy, a close friend of his father, but left only eight months later.[15][17] Also in 1899, he volunteered to fight in the Second Boer War, but was turned down because of a medical condition.[18] He tried to enlist for the Boer War three times in all, but was denied each time.[8]

In 1901, Thomson enrolled at Canada Business College in Chatham, Ontario. The school advertised instruction in stenography, bookkeeping, business correspondence and "plain and ornamental penmanship".[15] There, he developed abilities in penmanship and copperplate—necessary skills for a clerk.[19] After graduating at the end of 1901, he travelled briefly to Winnipeg before leaving for Seattle in January 1902, joining his older brother, George Thomson.[15][19][16] George and cousin F. R. McLaren had established the Acme Business School in Seattle, listed as the 11th largest business school in the United States.[15][20] Thomson worked briefly as an elevator operator at The Diller Hotel. By 1902, two more of his brothers, Ralph and Henry, had moved west to join the family's new school.[17]

Graphic design work edit

Seattle (1901–04) edit

After studying at the business school for six months, Thomson was hired at Maring & Ladd as a pen artist, draftsman and etcher.[15][19][21] He mainly produced business cards, brochures and posters, as well as three-colour printing.[19][21] Having previously learned calligraphy, he specialized in lettering, drawing and painting.[21] While working at Maring & Ladd, he was known to be stubbornly independent; his brother Fraser wrote that, instead of completing his work according to the direction provided, he would use his own design ideas, which angered his boss.[22] Thomson may have also worked as a freelance commercial designer, but there are no extant examples of such work.[23]

He eventually moved on to a local engraving company. Despite a good salary he left by the end of 1904. He quickly returned to Leith, possibly prompted by a rejected marriage proposal after his brief summer romance with Alice Elinor Lambert.[24][21] Lambert, who never married, later became a writer;[25] in one of her stories, she describes a young girl who refuses an artist's proposal and later regrets her decision.[21]

Toronto (1905–12) edit

 
Profile of Thomson wearing a suit and hat, c. 1905–10. During this time, Thomson was known to dress well and spend his money on nice clothes and fine dining.

Thomson moved to Toronto in the summer of 1905.[26] His first job upon his return to Canada was at the photo-engraving firm Legg Brothers, earning $11 a week.[24][27] He spent his free time reading poetry and going to concerts, the theatre and sporting events.[28] In a letter to an aunt, he wrote, "I love poetry best."[29] Friends described him during this time as "periodically erratic and sensitive, with fits of unreasonable despondency". Apart from buying art supplies, he spent his money on expensive clothes, fine dining and tobacco.[27] Around this time, he may have studied briefly with William Cruikshank, a British artist who taught at the Ontario College of Art.[1] Cruikshank was likely Thomson's only formal art instructor.[3]

In 1908 or 1909, Thomson joined Grip Ltd., a firm in Toronto that specialized in design and lettering work.[note 4] Grip was the leading graphic-design company in the country and introduced Art Nouveau, metal engraving and the four-colour process to Canada.[35] Albert Robson, then the art director at Grip, recalled that Thomson's early work at the firm was mostly in lettering and decorative designs for booklets and labels.[36] He wrote that Thomson made friends slowly but eventually found similar interests to his coworkers.[37] Several of the employees at Grip had been members of the Toronto Art Students' League, a group of newspaper artists, illustrators and commercial artists active between 1886 and 1904.[38] The members sketched in parts of eastern Canada and published an annual calendar with illustrations depicting Canadian history and rural life.[39]

The senior artist at Grip, J. E. H. MacDonald, encouraged his staff to paint outside in their spare time to better hone their skills.[40] It was at Grip that many of the eventual members of the Group of Seven would meet. In December 1910, artist William Smithson Broadhead was hired, joined by Arthur Lismer in February 1911.[41] Robson eventually hired Frederick Varley, followed by Franklin Carmichael in April 1911.[32][42] Although Thomson was not himself a member,[43][44] it was at the Arts and Letters Club that MacDonald introduced Thomson to Lawren Harris.[42] The club was considered the "centre of living culture in Toronto", providing an informal environment for the artistic community.[45] Every member of what would become the original Group of Seven had now met.[3] MacDonald left Grip in November 1911 to do freelance work and spend more time painting,[46] after the Ontario government purchased his canvas By the River (Early Spring) (1911).[41]

Painting career edit

Exploring Algonquin Park (1912–13) edit

 
Thomson fishing in Algonquin Park, c. 1914–16. He was enamoured with the Park, and many of his works were painted in the area.

Algonquin Park was established in 1893 by Oliver Mowat and the Ontario Legislature. Covering eighteen rectangular townships in Central Ontario, the Park was created to provide a space dedicated to recreation, wildlife and watershed protection, though logging operations continued to be permitted.[47] Thomson learned of the Park from fellow artist Tom McLean.[48][49] In May 1912, aged 34, he first visited the Park, venturing through the area on a canoe trip with his Grip colleague H. B. (Ben) Jackson.[50] Together, they took the Grand Trunk Railway from Toronto to Scotia Junction, then transferred to the Ottawa, Arnprior and Parry Sound Railway, arriving at Canoe Lake Station.[49] McLean introduced Thomson to the Park superintendent, G. W. Barlett.[48][51] Thomson and Jackson later met ranger Harry (Bud) Callighen while they camped nearby on Smoke Lake.[48][52]

It was also at this time that Thomson acquired his first sketching equipment.[48][53] He did not yet take painting seriously. According to Jackson, Thomson did not think "his work would ever be taken seriously; in fact, he used to chuckle over the idea".[54] Instead, they spent most of their time fishing,[54] except for "a few notes, skylines and colour effects".[48]

During the same trip, Thomson read Izaak Walton's 1653 fishing guide The Compleat Angler.[55] Primarily a fisherman's bible, the book also provided a philosophy of how to live, similar to the one described in Henry David Thoreau's 1854 book Walden, or Life in the Woods, a reflection on simple living in natural surroundings.[55] His time in Algonquin Park gave him an ideal setting to imitate Walton's "contemplative" life.[56] Ben Jackson wrote:

Tom was never understood by lots of people, was very quiet, modest and, as a friend of mine spoke of him, a gentle soul. He cared nothing for social life, but with one or two companions on a sketching and fishing trip with his pipe and Hudson Bay tobacco going, he was a delightful companion. If a party or the boys got a little loud or rough Tom would get his sketching kit and wander off alone. At times he liked to be that way, wanted to be by himself commune [sic] with nature.[56]

Upon returning to Toronto, Jackson published an article about his and Thomson's experience in the Park in the Toronto Sunday World, included in which were several illustrations.[48] After this initial experience, Thomson and another colleague, William Broadhead, went on a two-month expedition, going up the Spanish River and into Mississagi Forest Reserve (today Mississagi Provincial Park).[56] Thomson's transition from commercial art towards his own original style of painting became apparent around this time.[57][58] Much of his artwork from this trip, mainly oil sketches and photographs, was lost during two canoe spills;[57] the first was on Green Lake in a rain squall and the second in a series of rapids.[59][note 5]

In fall 1912, Albert Robson, Grip's art director, moved to the design firm Rous & Mann.[3] A month after returning to Toronto, Thomson followed Robson and left Grip to join Rous & Mann too.[47][40][61] They were soon joined by Varley, Carmichael and Lismer.[59] Robson later spoke favourably of Thomson's loyalty, calling him "a most diligent, reliable and capable craftsman".[36] Robson's success in attracting great talent was well understood.[62] Employee Leonard Rossell believed that the key to Robson's success "was that the artists felt that he was interested in them personally and did all he could to further their progress. Those who worked there were all allowed time off to pursue their studies ... Tom Thomson, so far as I know, never took definite lessons from anyone, yet he progressed quicker than any of us. But what he did was probably of more advantage to him. He took several months off in the summer and spent them in Algonquin Park."[63]

 
Northern Lake, Winter 1912–13. 71.7 x 102.4 cm. Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

In October, MacDonald introduced Thomson to James MacCallum.[59] A frequent visitor to the Ontario Society of Artists' (OSA) exhibitions, MacCallum was admitted to the Arts and Letters Club in January 1912. There, he met artists such as John William Beatty, Arthur Heming, MacDonald and Harris.[59] MacCallum eventually persuaded Thomson to leave Rous and Mann and start a painting career.[47] In October 1913, MacCallum introduced Thomson to A. Y. Jackson, later a founder of the Group of Seven.[64] MacCallum recognized Thomson's and Jackson's talents and offered to cover their expenses for one year if they committed themselves to painting full time.[65][66] MacCallum and Jackson both encouraged Thomson to "take up painting seriously, [but] he showed no enthusiasm. The chances of earning a livelihood by it did not appear to him promising. He was sensitive and independent, and feared he might become an object of patronage."[64] MacCallum wrote that when he first saw Thomson's sketches, he recognized their "truthfulness, their feeling and their sympathy with the grim fascinating northland ... they made me feel that the North had gripped Thomson as it had gripped me since I was eleven when I first sailed and paddled through its silent places." He described Thomson's paintings as "dark, muddy in colour, tight and not wanting in technical defects".[67] After Thomson's death, MacCallum helped preserve and advocated for his work.[66]

Thomson accepted MacCallum's offer under the same terms offered to Jackson.[64] He travelled around Ontario with his colleagues, especially to the wilderness of Ontario, which was to become a major source of inspiration. Regarding Algonquin Park, he wrote in a letter to MacCallum: "The best I can do does not do the place much justice in the way of beauty."[68] He ventured to rural areas near Toronto and tried to capture the surrounding nature. He may have worked as a fire ranger on the Mattagami reserve.[69] Addison and Little suggest that he guided fishing tours,[70][71] although Hill finds this unlikely since Thomson had only spent a few weeks in the Park the previous year.[72] Thomson became as familiar with logging scenes as with nature in the Park and painted them both.[73]

While returning to Toronto in November 1912, Thomson stopped in Huntsville.[72][74] The visit was possibly to meet with Winifred Trainor, a woman whose family owned a cottage on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park. Trainor was later rumoured to have been engaged to Thomson with a wedding planned for the late 1917, although little is known about their relationship.[75][76][note 6]

Thomson first exhibited with the OSA in March 1913, selling his painting Northern Lake (1912–13) to the Ontario Government for $250 (equivalent to CAD$5,900 in 2021).[77][78] The sale afforded him time to paint and sketch through the summer and fall of 1913.[79]

"Sketch" indicates that the work is a smaller oil work, generally on wood panel. The dimensions are often close to 21.6 × 26.7 cm (8½ x 10½ in.) but sometimes as small as 12.8 x 18.2 cm (5116 x 7316 in.).

Early recognition (1914–15) edit

 
The Studio Building in Toronto, where Thomson lived and worked from January 1914 through November 1915

Thomson often experienced self-doubt. A. Y. Jackson recalled that in the fall of 1914, Thomson threw his sketch box into the woods out of frustration,[80] and was "so shy he could hardly be induced to show his sketches".[43] Harris expressed similar sentiments, writing that Thomson "had no opinion of his own work", and would even throw burnt matches at his paintings.[81] Several of the canvases he sent to exhibitions remained unsigned.[note 7] If someone praised one of his sketches, he immediately gave it to them as a gift.[43] A turning point in his career came in 1914, when the National Gallery of Canada, under the directorship of Eric Brown, began to acquire his paintings. Although the money was not enough to live on, the recognition was unheard of for an unknown artist.[83]

For several years he shared a studio and living quarters with fellow artists, initially living in the Studio Building with Jackson in January 1914. Jackson described the Studio Building as "a lively centre for new ideas, experiments, discussions, plans for the future and visions of an art inspired by the Canadian countryside".[84] It was there that Thomson, "after much self-deprecation, finally submitted to becoming a full-time artist".[85] They split the rent—$22 a month—on the ground floor while construction on the rest of the building was finished.[28] After Jackson moved out in December to go to Montreal, Carmichael took his place.[28][86][87] Thomson and Carmichael shared a studio space through the winter.[88] On March 3, 1914, Thomson was nominated as a member of the OSA by Lismer and T. G. Greene. He was elected on the 17th. He did not participate in any of their activities beyond sending paintings for annual exhibitions.[43] Harris described Thomson's strange working hours years later:

When he was in Toronto, Tom rarely left the shack in the daytime and then only when it was absolutely necessary. He took his exercise at night. He would put on his snowshoes and tramp the length of the Rosedale ravine and out into the country, and return before dawn.[89]

 
Thomson with his catch at Canoe Lake, Algonquin Park, c. 1915

In late April 1914, Thomson arrived in Algonquin Park, where he was joined by Lismer on May 9. They camped on Molly's Island in Smoke Lake, travelling to Canoe, Smoke, Ragged, Crown and Wolf Lakes.[90] He spent his spring and summer divided between Georgian Bay and Algonquin Park, visiting James MacCallum by canoe. His travels during this time have proved difficult to discern, with such a large amount of ground covered in such a short time, painting the French River, Byng Inlet, Parry Sound and Go-Home Bay from May 24 through August 10.[91] H. A. Callighen, a park ranger, wrote in his journal that Thomson and Lismer left Algonquin Park on May 24.[92] By May 30, Thomson was at Parry Sound and on June 1 was camped at the French River with MacCallum.[92][93]

Art historian Joan Murray noted that Thomson was at Go-Home Bay for the next two months, or at least until August 10 when he was seen again in Algonquin Park by Callighan.[94] According to Wadland, if this timeline is correct, it would require "an extraordinary canoeist ... The difficulty is augmented by the fact of stopping to sketch at intervals along the way."[93] Wadland suggested that Thomson may have travelled by train at some point and by steamship thereafter.[91] Addison and Harwood instead said that Thomson had found much of the inland "monotonously flat" and the rapids "ordinary".[95] Wadland found this characterization unhelpful, pointing out that the rapids Thomson had faced were hardly "ordinary".[93]

 
Cottage on a Rocky Shore, Summer 1914. Sketch. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

MacCallum provided specific dates for two of Thomson's paintings—May 30 and June 1 for Parry Sound Harbour and Spring, French River, respectively.[92][96] These are some of the only instances of precise dating for his work.[97] Cottage on a Rocky Shore is a depiction of MacCallum's cottage contrasted with the vast expanse of sky and water. Evening, Pine Island is of a nearby island MacCallum took Thomson to visit.[98] He continued to paint around the islands until he departed, probably because he found MacCallum's cottage too demanding socially, writing to Varley that it was "too much like north Rosedale".[98][99]

Thomson continued canoeing alone until he met with A. Y. Jackson at Canoe Lake in mid-September. Though World War I had erupted that year, he and Jackson went on a canoe trip, in October meeting up with Varley and his wife Maud, as well as Lismer and his wife Esther, and daughter Marjorie.[98] This marked the first time three Group of Seven members painted together, and the only time they worked with Thomson.[58][83] In his 1958 autobiography, A Painter's Country, A. Y. Jackson wrote that, "Had it not been for the war, the Group [of Seven] would have formed several years earlier and it would have included Thomson."[100]

Why Thomson did not serve in the war has been debated.[101] Mark Robinson and Thomson's family said that he was turned down after multiple attempts to enlist, likely due to his poor health and age but also possibly because he had flat feet.[8][18][83] Blodwen Davies wrote that Thomson's artist friends tried to convince him to not risk his life, but he decided to secretly volunteer anyway.[102] Andrew Hunter has found this scenario to be improbable, especially given that other artist friends did volunteer for the war, such as A. Y. Jackson.[101] Thomson's sister suggested that he was a pacifist and that "he hated war and said simply in 1914 that he never would kill anyone but would like to help in a hospital, if accepted".[103] William Colgate wrote that Thomson "brooded much upon" the war and that "he himself did not enlist. Rumour has it that he tried, and failed to pass the doctor. This is doubtful."[104] Edward Godin, a companion, said "We had many discussions on the war. As I remember it he did not think that Canada should be involved. He was very outspoken in his opposition to Government patronage. Especially in the Militia. I do not think that he would offer himself for service. I know up until that time he had not tried to enlist."[101] There is only one verifiable example of Thomson's opinion on the war, taken from a letter he wrote to J. E. H. MacDonald in 1915:

As with yourself, I can't get used to the idea of [A. Y.] Jackson being in the machine and it is rotten that in this so-called civilized age that such things can exist, but since this war has started it will have to go on until one side wins out, and of course there is no doubt which side it will be, and we will see Jackson back on the job once more.[105][106]

 
In Algonquin Park, Winter 1914–15. 63.2 × 81.1 cm. McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg

With MacCallum's year of financial support over, Thomson's financial future became uncertain.[87] He briefly looked into applying for a position as a park ranger, but balked after seeing that it could take months for the application to go through. Instead, he considered working in an engraving shop over the winter.[98] He made little effort to sell his paintings, preferring to give them away, though he brought in some money from the paintings he sold.[107] In mid-November, he donated In Algonquin Park to an exhibition organized to raise money for the Canadian Patriotic Fund. It was sold to Marion Long for $50 (equivalent to CAD$1,200 in 2021).[87]

In the spring of 1915, Thomson returned to Algonquin Park earlier than he had in any previous year and had already painted twenty-eight sketches by April 22. From April through July, he spent much of his time fishing, assisting groups on several different lakes, and sketching when he had time.[108] In July, he was invited to send paintings to the Nova Scotia Provincial Exhibition in September. Because he was in Algonquin Park, his friends selected three works to send—two unidentified works from 1914 and the sketch Canadian Wildflowers.[109] From the end of September to mid-October, he spent his time at Mowat, a village on the north end of Canoe Lake.[110] By November, he was at Round Lake with Tom Wattie and Robert McComb.[111][112] In late November, he returned to Toronto and moved into a shack behind the Studio Building that Harris and MacCallum fixed up for him,[113][114] renting it for $1 a month.[115][note 8]

In 1915, MacCallum commissioned MacDonald, Lismer and Thomson to paint decorative panels for his cottage on Go-Home Bay. In October of that year, MacDonald went up to take dimensions.[119][120] Thomson produced four panels which were probably meant to go over the windows. In April 1916, when MacDonald and Lismer went to install them, they found that MacDonald's measurements were incorrect and the panels did not fit.[121][122][note 9]

Artistic peak (1916–17) edit

In March 1916, Thomson exhibited four canvases with the OSA: In the Northland (at that time titled The Birches), Spring Ice, Moonlight and October (then titled The Hardwoods), all of which were painted over the winter of 1915–16. Sir Edmund Walker and Eric Brown of the National Gallery of Canada wanted to purchase In the Northland, but Montreal trustee Francis Shepherd convinced them to purchase Spring Ice instead.[119] The reception of Thomson's paintings at this time was mixed. Margaret Fairbairn of the Toronto Daily Star wrote, "Mr. Tom Thomson's 'The Birches' and 'The Hardwoods' show a fondness for intense yellows and orange and strong blue, altogether a fearless use of violent colour which can scarcely be called pleasing, and yet which seems an exaggeration of a truthful feeling that time will temper."[125] A more favourable take came from artist Wyly Grier in The Christian Science Monitor:

 
In the Northland, Winter 1915–1916.[note 10] 101.7 x 114.5 cm. Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal

Tom Thomson again reveals his capacity to be modern and remain individual. His early pictures—in which the quality of naivete had all the genuineness of the effort of the tyro and was not the counterfeit of it which is so much in evidence in the intensely rejuvenated works of the highly sophisticated—showed the faculty for affectionate and truthful record by a receptive eye and faithful hand; but his work today has reached higher levels of technical accomplishment. His Moonlight, Spring Ice and The Birches are among his best.[127]

In The Canadian Courier, painter Estelle Kerr also spoke positively, describing Thomson as "one of the most promising of Canadian painters who follows the impressionist movement and his work reveals himself to be a fine colourist, a clever technician, and a truthful interpreter of the north land in its various aspects".[128]

In 1916, Thomson left for Algonquin Park earlier than any previous year, evidenced by the many snow studies he produced at this time.[129] In April or early May, MacCallum, Harris and his cousin Chester Harris joined Thomson at Cauchon Lake for a canoe trip.[129][130] After MacCallum and Chester left, Harris and Thomson paddled together to Aura Lee Lake.[131] Thomson produced many sketches which varied in composition, although they all had vivid colour and thickly-applied paint.[130] MacCallum was present when he painted his Sketch for "The Jack Pine", writing that the tree fell over onto Thomson before the sketch was completed. He added that Harris thought the tree killed Thomson, "but he sprang up and continued painting".[129]

 
Tea Lake Dam, Summer 1917. Sketch. McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg

At the end of May, Thomson took a job as a fire ranger stationed at Achray on Grand Lake with Ed Godin. He followed the Booth Lumber Company's log drive down the Petawawa River to the north end of the park.[132] He found that fire ranging and painting did not mix well together,[133] writing, "[I] have done very little sketching this summer as the two jobs don't fit in ... When we are travelling two go together, one for canoe and the other the pack. And there's no place for a sketch outfit when your [sic] fire ranging. We are not fired yet but I am hoping to get put off right away."[134] He likely returned to Toronto in late October or early November.[133]

Over the following winter, encouragement from Harris, MacDonald and MacCallum saw Thomson move into the most productive portion of his career,[135] with Thomson writing in a letter that he "got quite a lot done".[136] Despite this, he did not submit any paintings to the OSA exhibition in the spring of 1917.[126] It was during this time that he produced many of his most famous works, including The Jack Pine and The West Wind.[137] MacCallum suggested that several canvas works were unfinished, including Woodland Waterfall, The Pointers and The Drive.[138] Barker Fairley similarly described The West Wind as unfinished.[139] Charles Hill has written that there are no reasons to believe Woodland Waterfall was unfinished.[126] Similarly, while it has sometimes been suggested that The Drive was modified after Thomson's death,[140] a reproduction from 1918 displays no discernible differences.[141]

Thomson returned to Canoe Lake at the beginning of April, arriving early enough to paint the remaining snow and the ice breaking up on the surrounding lakes. He had little money but wrote that he could manage for about a year. On April 28, 1917, he received a guide's licence. Unlike previous years, he remained at Mowat with Lieutenant Crombine and his wife, Daphne. Thomson invited Daphne Crombie to select something from his spring sketches as a gift, and she selected Path Behind Mowat Lodge.[142]

Besides the deep love he had come to develop for Algonquin Park, Thomson was beginning to show an eagerness to depict areas beyond the park and explore other northern subjects.[143] In an April 1917 letter to his brother-in-law, he wrote that he was considering taking the Canadian Northern Railway west so he could paint the Canadian Rockies in July and August.[144][145] A. Y. Jackson suggested Thomson would have travelled even further north, just as the other members of the Group of Seven eventually did.[144]

Death edit

 
The Tom Thomson Memorial Cairn, Canoe Lake, Algonquin Park

On July 8, 1917, Thomson disappeared during a canoeing trip on Canoe Lake.[146] His upturned canoe was spotted later in the afternoon, and his body was discovered in the lake eight days later.[146][147] It was noted that he had a four-inch cut on his right temple and had bled from his right ear. The cause of death was officially determined to be "accidental drowning".[146][148][149] The day after the body was discovered, it was interred in Mowat Cemetery near Canoe Lake.[146][150][note 11] Under the direction of Thomson's older brother George, the body was exhumed two days later, and re-interred on July 21 in the family plot beside the Leith Presbyterian Church in what is now the Municipality of Meaford, Ontario.[151][152][153]

In September 1917, J. E. H. MacDonald and John William Beatty erected a memorial cairn at Hayhurst Point on Canoe Lake, to honour Thomson where he died.[151][154][155]

There has been much speculation about the circumstances of Thomson's death, including that he was murdered or committed suicide. Though these ideas lack substance, they have continued to persist in the popular culture.[146][156] Andrew Hunter has pointed to Park ranger Mark Robinson as being largely responsible for the suggestion that there was more to his death than accidental drowning. Hunter expands on this thought, writing, "I am convinced that people's desire to believe the Thomson murder mystery/soap opera is rooted in the firmly fixed idea that he was an expert woodsman, intimate with nature. Such figures aren't supposed to die by 'accident.' If they do, it is like Grey Owl's being exposed as an Englishman."[157]

Art and technique edit

 
Northern River, Winter 1914–15. 115.1 × 102 cm. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Artistic development edit

Thomson was largely self-taught. His experiences as a graphic designer with Toronto's Grip Ltd. honed his draughtsmanship.[3] Although he began painting and drawing at an early age, it was only in 1912, when he was well into his thirties, that he began to paint seriously.[57][58] His first trips to Algonquin Park inspired him to follow the lead of fellow artists in producing oil sketches of natural scenes on small, rectangular panels for easy portability while travelling. Between 1912 and his death in 1917, Thomson produced hundreds of these small sketches, many of which are now considered works in their own right, and are mostly found in the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg and the Tom Thomson Art Gallery in Owen Sound.[158]

Thomson produced nearly all of his works between 1912 and 1917. Most of his large canvases were completed in his most productive period, from late 1916 to early 1917.[158] The patronage of James MacCallum enabled Thomson's transition from graphic designer to professional painter.[65][66] Although the Group of Seven was not founded until after his death, his work was sympathetic to that of group members A. Y. Jackson, Frederick Varley, and Arthur Lismer. These artists shared an appreciation for rugged, unkempt natural scenery, and all used broad brush strokes and a liberal application of paint to capture the beauty and colour of the Ontario landscape.[159][160] Thomson's art also bears some stylistic resemblance to the work of European post-impressionists such as Vincent van Gogh.[161] Other key influences were the Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts movements of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, styles with which he became familiar while working in the graphic arts.[162]

 
Northern Lights, Spring 1917. Sketch. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Thomson's artwork is typically divided into two bodies: the first are the small oil sketches on wood panels, of which there are around 400, and the second is of around 50 larger works on canvas.[158] The smaller sketches were typically done en plein air in "the North", primarily Algonquin Park, in the spring, summer and fall.[163] Mark Robinson later recounted that Thomson usually had a particular motif he wanted to depict before going into nature to find a comparison.[164][165] The larger canvases were instead completed over the winter in Thomson's studio—an old utility shack with a wood-burning stove on the grounds of the Studio Building, an artist's enclave in Rosedale, Toronto.[28][166][167] About a dozen of the major canvases were derived directly from smaller sketches.[note 12] Paintings like Northern River, Spring Ice, The Jack Pine and The West Wind were only later expanded into larger oil paintings.[158]

Sketches from 1913 and earlier use a variety of supports, including canvas laid down on paperboard, canvas laid down on wood and commercial canvas-board. In 1914, he began to favour the larger birch wood panels used by A. Y. Jackson, typically measuring around 21.6 × 26.7 cm (8½ × 10½ in.). From late 1914 on, Thomson alternated between painting on these inexpensive pieces of wood—some from crates, bookbinder's board, and other assorted sources—and composite wood-pulp boards.[169]

Although the sketches were produced quickly, the canvases were developed over weeks or even months. Compared to the panels, they display an "inherent formality",[170] and lack much of the "energy, spontaneity, and immediacy" of the original sketches.[168] The transition from small to large required a reinvention or elaboration of the original details; by comparing sketches with their respective canvases, one can see the changes Thomson made in colour, detail and background textural patterns.[170][171] Although few of the larger paintings were sold during his lifetime, they formed the basis of posthumous exhibitions, including one at Wembley in London in 1924, that eventually brought his work to international attention.[172][173][174]

Described as having an "idiosyncratic palette", Thomson had exceptional control of colour.[175] He often mixed available pigments to create new, unusual colours that, along with his brushwork, made his art instantly recognizable regardless of its subject.[176] His painting style and the atmosphere, colours and forms of his work influenced the work of his colleagues and friends, especially Jackson, Lismer, MacDonald, Harris and Carmichael.[177]

Series and themes edit

Trees edit

 
The West Wind, Winter 1916–17. 120.7 × 137.9 cm. Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Thomson's most famous paintings are his depictions of pine trees, particularly The Jack Pine and The West Wind. David Silcox has described these paintings as "the visual equivalent of a national anthem, for they have come to represent the spirit of the whole country, notwithstanding the fact that vast tracts of Canada have no pine trees",[178] and as "so majestic and memorable that nearly everyone knows them".[179] Arthur Lismer described them similarly, saying that the tree in The West Wind was a symbol of the Canadian character, unyielding to the wind and emblematic of steadfastness and resolution.[180]

Thomson had a great enthusiasm for trees and worked to capture their forms, their surrounding locations, and the effect of the seasons on them. He normally depicted trees as amalgamated masses, giving "form structure and colour by dragging paint in bold strokes over an underlying tone".[181] His favourite motif was of a slight hill next to a body of water.[182] His enthusiasm is especially apparent in an anecdote from Ernest Freure, who invited Thomson to camp on an island on Georgian Bay:

One day while we were together on my island, I was talking to Tom about my plans for cleaning up the dead wood and trees and I said I was going to cut down all the trees but he said, "No, don't do that, they are beautiful."[183]

The theme of the single tree is common in Art Nouveau,[184] while the motif of the lone, heroic tree goes back even further to at least Caspar David Friedrich and early German Romanticism.[185] Thomson may also have been influenced by the work of MacDonald while working at Grip Limited. MacDonald in turn was influenced by the landscape art of John Constable, whose work he likely saw while in England from 1903 to 1906.[184] Constable's art influenced Thomson's as well, something apparent when Constable's Stoke-by-Nayland (c. 1810–11) is compared with Thomson's Poplars by a Lake.[186]

Thomson's earlier paintings were closer to literal renderings of the trees in front of him, and as he progressed the trees became more expressive as Thomson amplified their individual qualities.[187] Byng Inlet, Georgian Bay shows the broken, high-keyed colour that Thomson and his colleagues experimented with later in his career, and is similar to Lismer's Sunglow. While Lismer only applied the technique to the water, Thomson applied it throughout the composition.[188] According to MacCallum, Thomson worked on Pine Island, Georgian Bay over an extended period.[188] He wrote that this painting had "more emotion and feeling than any other of [Thomson's] canvases".[188] In contrast, MacDonald found it "rather commonplace in color & composition & not representative of Thomson at his best".[189]

Skies edit

 
Sunset, Summer 1915. Sketch. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Thomson was preoccupied with capturing the sky, especially near the end of his career from 1915 onward. Paintings like Sunset—which was painted at water level in a canoe—illustrate his excited brushstrokes in capturing the lake's reflection.[190] The painting was done over a grey-green ground, adding depth to both the light of the sky and the reflecting water.[117] Paintings from 1913 and on consistently utilize the perspective of the canoe, with a narrow foreground of water, a distant shoreline and a dominating sky.[191][192]

The 1915 volcanic eruption of Lassen Peak in California provided dramatic sunrises and sunsets in the northern hemisphere for the year. These skies provided artistic inspiration for Thomson and other artists in the same way that the eruption of Krakatoa in the previous century had inspired Edvard Munch.[192][193] Sky effects were one of Thomson's main interests for the entire year, indicated by his heightened use of colour.[117]

Harold Town has compared Sky (The Light That Never Was) to the works of J. M. W. Turner. In particular, he notes the way that the sky "[creeps] into the landscape, big rhythms supplanting small movement". The horizon disappears and pure movement is left behind.[194]

Nocturnes edit

 
Northern Lights, Spring 1917. Sketch. Thomson Collection, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Thomson produced more nocturnes than the rest of the Group of Seven combined—roughly two dozen.[195][196] MacCallum recalled that Thomson often spent his nights lying in his canoe in the middle of the lake, stargazing and avoiding mosquitoes.[195][197] Besides capturing the nighttime sky, he also captured silhouettes of spruce and birch trees, lumber camps, two moose emerging from water and the northern lights, painting five different sketches of the aurora.[196][198]

Mark Robinson recounted that Thomson stood and contemplated the aurora for an extended period of time before going back into his cabin to paint by lamplight.[199] He sometimes completed nocturnes this way, going back and forth between painting indoors and looking at the subject outside until he completed the sketch.[200] Other times, given the difficulty of painting by moonlight, many of the nocturnes were painted entirely from memory. MacCallum confirmed that the sketch Moose at Night was completed in this way, writing on the back "Winter 1916—at studio",[142] implying it was probably painted in Toronto.[201] His moonlight paintings use a "dreamy, pale-toned style", applying the techniques of Impressionism in his observations of light, reflection and atmosphere.[200]

Flowers edit

 
Wildflowers, Summer 1915. Sketch. McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg

As was typical for painters of the early twentieth century, Thomson produced still lifes of flowers,[202] all of which appear in the form of sketches. His love of flowers may have developed from his father who, as a neighbour noted, had "a permanent half acre of a really good garden which was always worth going to see".[203] Thomson's time spent as a child collecting samples with his naturalist relative William Brodie may have similarly influenced him, though his interest in painting flowers seems to have been more focused on patterning and decoration than on the horticultural specifics of the subject.[204]

These paintings, especially Marguerites, Wood Lilies and Vetch and Wildflowers, are particularly powerful examples of the genre.[202] J. E. H. MacDonald—himself deeply invested in floral imagery—was so captured by Marguerites, Wood Lilies and Vetch that he kept it for himself, writing "Not For Sale" on the back.[205][206] Thomson's work is contrasted from MacDonald's by what Joan Murray calls, "its elegant, slightly funky form and throwaway spontaneity."[207] Lawren Harris instead noted Wildflowers as a favourite, writing "1st class" on the verso. The colour of the sketch is less brilliant, but has superb brushwork and is well coordinated, setting blues against yellows and reds against whites.[208]

Responding to his subject with improvization,[209] every painting is different in its colour scheme and arrangement.[210] In all the sketches, he redirected emphasis from the delicacy of the flowers towards simple broad strokes of colour, something Harold Town thought "[imparted] a toughness of design sometimes missing in his harder themes of rock and bracken".[211] In Water Flowers particularly, the shapes are handled so summarily that the focus moves entirely to the colour of the flowers.[212] This, combined with the black background, produces a more abstract effect.[213][214] The black backdrop also causes the colours of the flowers to appear more vivid.[206][215]

Industry in nature edit

 
Lumber Dam, Summer 1915. Sketch. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

During Thomson's time in Algonquin Park, logging and the lumber industry were a constant presence.[216][note 13] He often painted the machinery left behind by lumber companies; Lismer, MacDonald and he were especially drawn to the subject. A. Y. Jackson wrote,

It was a ragged country; a lumber company had slashed it up, and fire had run through it ... Thomson was much indebted to the lumber companies. They had built dams and log chutes, and had made clearings for camps. But for them, the landscape would have been just bush, difficult to travel in and with nothing to paint.[217]

Around 1916, Thomson followed the drive of logs down the Madawaska River, painting the subject in The Drive. MacDonald similarly expressed the drive in his 1915 painting Logs on the Gatineau.[218] Besides the dams, pointer and alligator boats and log drives that appear in Thomson's work, other less obvious depictions of the lumber industry are evident. For example, areas cleared out due to logging appear in early sketches, such as Canoe Lake (1913) and Red Forest. The painting Drowned Land similarly displays the damage caused by logging operations and flooding due to damming.[47] As well, the white birches present in many paintings only thrive in "sunny, open areas whose previous tree cover had been removed",[219] meaning that logging was in some way necessary for them to flourish.[216]

Thomson's and the Group of Seven's work reflects the typical Canadian attitudes of the time, namely that the available natural resources were meant to be exploited.[73][220][note 14] Harold Town has argued that, while Thomson was not directly critical of industry, mining and logging, he "did not glorify industry in the bush."[223] Paul Walton of McMaster University noted that Thomson occasionally referenced both the lumbering and tourism practices of Algonquin Park and "did not entirely ignore the damaging effects of logging on the environment ... but for the most part he concentrated on newly opened vista of sky and water or on finding decorative patterns of colour, form, and texture in the tangle of underbrush, smaller trees, and bared rock, the 'bush' that was often the remnant of the original forest."[224] Jackson first noted these distinctions in Thomson's works, from those "showing a low shore line and a big sky" and those "finding happy color motives amid [the] tangle and confusion" of "his waste of rock and swamp."[225]

People edit

 
The Poacher, Spring 1916. Sketch. Thomson Collection, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Thomson, like most of the members of the Group of Seven, rarely painted people.[226][227][note 15] When he did, the human subject was usually someone close to him personally, such as the depiction of Shannon Fraser In the Sugar Bush. Harold Town observed that both Thomson and Canadian artist David Milne "shared in common a similar inability to draw the human figure",[229] something professor John Wadland thought was "embarrassingly evident" in several of Thomson's portraits.[229] Thomson's most successful attempts at capturing people typically feature figures far off in the distance, allowing them to blend in to the scene. This is apparent in paintings like Little Cauchon Lake, Bateaux, The Drive, The Pointers and Tea Lake Dam.[226]

Town described paintings like Man with Axe (Lowery Dixon) Splitting Wood as stiff, yet still held together in a cohesive crudity. He described Figure of a Lady, Laura differently, interpreting it as a tender work, "well-designed and plainly expressed, this loving picture is so secure in intention that it survives, indeed triumphs, over the severe cracking of the paint".[228] The figure in The Poacher is recorded deliberately, including his hat, hunting vest and blue shirt. The hot coal grill in front of him is drying his poach—likely venison.[230]

Legacy and influence edit

 
Thomson fishing at Tea Lake Dam in Algonquin Park, c. 1915

Since his death, Thomson's work has grown in value and popularity. Group of Seven member Arthur Lismer wrote that he "is the manifestation of the Canadian character".[231] Another contemporaneous Canadian painter, David Milne, wrote to National Gallery of Canada Director H. O. McCurry in 1930, "Your Canadian art apparently, for now at least, went down in Canoe Lake. Tom Thomson still stands as the Canadian painter, harsh, brilliant, brittle, uncouth, not only most Canadian but most creative. How the few things of his stick in one's mind."[232] Murray notes that Thomson's influence can be seen in the work of later Canadian artists, including Rae Johnson, Joyce Wieland, Gordon Rayner and Michael Snow.[233] Sherrill Grace wrote that for Roy Kiyooka and Dennis Lee, he "is a haunting presence" and "embodies the Canadian artistic identity".[234]

As of 2015, the highest price achieved by a Thomson sketch was Early Spring, Canoe Lake, which sold in 2009 for CAD$2,749,500. Few major canvases remain in private collections, making the record unlikely to be broken.[235] One example of the demand his work has achieved is the previously lost Sketch for Lake in Algonquin Park; discovered in an Edmonton basement in 2018, it sold for nearly half a million dollars at a Toronto auction.[236][237] The increased value of his work has led to the discovery of numerous forgeries on the market,[238] such as those produced by convicted forger William Firth MacGregor.[239][note 16] Art historian Joan Murray assembled a catalogue raisonné of Thomson works until her retirement in 2016.[241]

In 1967, the Tom Thomson Art Gallery opened in Owen Sound.[242] In 1968, Thomson's shack from behind the Studio Building was moved to the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg.[243] Many of his works are also on display at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, the Art Gallery of Ontario, and the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg, Ontario.[158] In 2004, another historical marker honouring Thomson was moved from its previous location near the centre of Leith to the graveyard in which he is now buried. The gravesite has become a popular spot for visitors to the area with many fans of his work leaving pennies or art supplies behind as tribute.[244]

Though best known for his painting, Thomson is often mythologized as a veritable outdoorsman. James MacCallum contributed stories to this image. He has often been remembered as an expert canoeist, though David Silcox has argued that this image is romanticized.[245] In the case of fishing, he was no doubt proficient. He had a deep love of fishing for his entire life, so much so that his reputation through Algonquin Park was equally divided between art and angling. Most who visited the Park were led by hired guides, but he travelled through the park on his own. Many of his fishing locations appear in his work.[246]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Thomson may have briefly studied under British artist William Cruikshank around 1905.[1] It is also possible that he read John Ruskin's 1857 handbook The Elements of Drawing while learning to draw.[2] Besides these instances it is clear that he had no other art instruction.[3] Refer to Death and legacy of Tom Thomson § An "untainted" artist.
  2. ^ Though he died before the Group of Seven's founding in 1920, Thomson's connection to the artists and the art they created is unquestionable.[4] In his 1964 book The Story of the Group of Seven, Lawren Harris wrote,

    I have, in my story of the Group, included Tom Thomson as a working member, although the name of the group did not originate until after his death. Tom Thomson was, nevertheless, as vital to the movement, as much a part of its formation and development, as any other member.[5]

  3. ^ "Sketch" indicates that the work is a smaller oil work, generally on wood panel. The dimensions are often close to 21.6 × 26.7 cm (8½ × 10½ in.) but sometimes as small as 12.8 × 18.2 cm (5116 x 7316 in.).
  4. ^ Sources disagree on the timing of Thomson's hiring. Grip supervisor Albert H. Robson wrote in 1932 that he was hired in 1907,[30] but by 1937 Robson was instead writing that he was hired in 1908.[31] Robert Stacey has suggested December 1908;[19] David Silcox the beginning of 1909;[3] Art historians Joan Murray and Gregory Humeniuk each suggest December 1908 or January 1909.[32][33] Curator Charles Hill noted that Thomson is listed in the Toronto City Directory between 1906 and 1909 as working with Legg Bros. Photo Engravers; in 1910 merely as an artist living at 99 Gerrard E.; and in 1911 as at Grip Ltd. Hill supposes that Thomson therefore likely began at Grip in late 1909, after the information for the 1910 directory was collected.[34]
  5. ^ Thomson wrote in a letter to his friend M. J. (John) McRuer:

    We started in at Bisco and took a long trip on the lakes around there going up the Spanish River and over into the Mississauga [Mississagi] water we got a great many good snapshots of game—mostly moose and some sketches, but we had a dump in the forty-mile rapids which is near the end of our trip and lost most of our stuff—we only saved 2 rolls of film out of about 14 dozen. Outside of that we had a peach of a time as the Mississauga is considered the finest canoe trip in the world.[60]

  6. ^ For more regarding Thomson's possible romantic relationship with Trainor, refer to MacGregor (2010).
  7. ^ Unsigned paintings exhibited during Thomson's lifetime include: Northern Lake (1912–13); Morning Cloud; Moonlight (1913–14); Split Rock, Georgian Bay; Canadian Wildflowers; Moonlight (1915); and October.[82]
  8. ^ In his 1959 piece, "My Memories of Tom Thomson", Thoreau MacDonald cited November 1915 as when Thomson moved into the shack behind the Studio Building.[116] Most sources agree with this, including Charles Hill,[117] William Little[114] and Addison & Harwood.[113] David Silcox has written that the move happened in either late 1914[28] or early 1915.[28][118]
  9. ^ MacDonald's measurements were 44½ × 37", but the panels installed were 27 × 37". The panels Thomson produced were 47½ × 38".[123][124]
  10. ^ In the Northland was originally titled The Birches.[119] All of Thomson's canvases from the winter of 1916–17 were titled after his death.[126]
  11. ^ Mowat Cemetery was located at 45°33′47″N 78°43′42″W / 45.56306°N 78.72833°W / 45.56306; -78.72833 (Mowat Cemetery).
  12. ^ Silcox & Town report that "barely a dozen" of the canvases were developed directly from the sketches,[158] while Joan Murray puts the number at eight.[168]
  13. ^ For more regarding the industrialization of Algonquin Park, refer to Edwards (1976), Lloyd (2000), and McKenna (1976).
  14. ^ An article in the Owen Sound Sun describing Thomson's 1912 visit to the Mississagi Forest Reserve wrote that "technology gave value to the landscape"[221] and placed emphasis on the mineral, forest, water-power, and fish and game resources rather than on any scenic beauty the land possessed.[222]
  15. ^ Notable exceptions are Frederick Varley and Frank Johnston, Varley's main interest being people, faces and figures.[227][228] At the beginning of his career, Lawren Harris captured people in nearly all of his depictions of Toronto and did several portraits, but later moved on to only depicting landscapes. Edwin Holgate painted the female figure and completed several nudes.[227]
  16. ^ Murray identifies two Thomson forgeries in her 1994 book, Tom Thomson: The Last Spring, each of which feature "ill-defined [landscapes], half-hidden by the smeary paint handling and heavy impasto."[240] In 2021–22, the Art Gallery of Hamilton and Agnes Etherington Art Centre in Kingston, Ontario held an exhibition comparing known Thomson forgeries to authentic works, alongside paintings with uncertain origins.[241]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b
  2. ^ Murray (1999), p. 2.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Silcox (2015), p. 9.
  4. ^ Waddington & Waddington (2016), p. 29.
  5. ^ Harris (1964), p. 7.
  6. ^ Klages (2016), p. 10.
  7. ^ a b c Silcox (2015), p. 4.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Silcox & Town (2017), p. 41.
  9. ^ MacDonald (1917), p. 47, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 113.
  10. ^ Murray (1998), pp. 14–15, 22–25.
  11. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 57.
  12. ^ Murray (1999), p. 5.
  13. ^ Murray (1999), pp. 6–7.
  14. ^ Wadland (2002), p. 93.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Hill (2002), p. 113.
  16. ^ a b Silcox & Town (2017), p. 42.
  17. ^ a b Silcox (2015), p. 6.
  18. ^ a b Silcox (2006), pp. 107–08.
  19. ^ a b c d e Stacey (2002), p. 50.
  20. ^ Murray (1971), p. 9.
  21. ^ a b c d e Silcox (2015), p. 7.
  22. ^ Stacey (2002), pp. 50–51.
  23. ^ Stacey (2002), p. 51.
  24. ^ a b Stacey (2002), p. 52.
  25. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 43.
  26. ^ Wadland (2002), p. 92.
  27. ^ a b Silcox (2015), p. 7.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Silcox (2006), p. 127.
  29. ^ Murray (1999), p. viii.
  30. ^ Robson (1932), p. 138, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 113n16.
  31. ^ Robson (1937), p. 5, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 113n16.
  32. ^ a b Murray (2002b), p. 310.
  33. ^ Humeniuk (2020), p. 315.
  34. ^ Hill (2002), p. 113n16.
  35. ^ King (2010), p. 14.
  36. ^ a b Robson (1932), p. 138, quoted in Stacey (2002), p. 53.
  37. ^ Robson (1937), p. 6, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 114.
  38. ^ Hill (2002), p. 115.
  39. ^ Stacey (1998), p. 96n9.
  40. ^ a b Stacey (2002), p. 58.
  41. ^ a b Hill (2002), p. 114.
  42. ^ a b Murray (2004), p. 16.
  43. ^ a b c d Hill (2002), p. 117.
  44. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 9n2.
  45. ^ Reid (1970), p. 28.
  46. ^ Stacey & Bishop (1996), p. 118.
  47. ^ a b c d Wadland (2002), p. 95.
  48. ^ a b c d e f Hill (2002), p. 118.
  49. ^ a b Wadland (2002), p. 94.
  50. ^
  51. ^ Addison & Harwood (1969), p. 88n4.
  52. ^ Addison (1974), p. 75.
  53. ^ Murray (2011), p. 3.
  54. ^ a b Hunter (2002), pp. 25–26.
  55. ^ a b Hunter (2002), p. 26.
  56. ^ a b c Hunter (2002), p. 27.
  57. ^ a b c Silcox (2015), p. 10.
  58. ^ a b c Silcox (2006), p. 23.
  59. ^ a b c d Hill (2002), p. 119.
  60. ^ Murray (2002a), p. 297.
  61. ^ Klages (2016), p. 23.
  62. ^ Stacey (2002), pp. 57–58.
  63. ^ Rossell (c. 1951), p. 3, quoted in Stacey (2002), p. 58.
  64. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 122.
  65. ^ a b Silcox (2006), p. 21.
  66. ^ a b c Silcox (2015), p. 11.
  67. ^ MacCallum (1918), p. 376.
  68. ^ Murray (2002a), p. 298.
  69. ^ Murray (2002b), p. 312.
  70. ^ Addison (1974), p. 18.
  71. ^ Little (1970), p. 13.
  72. ^ a b Hill (2002), p. 121.
  73. ^ a b Silcox (2015), p. 58.
  74. ^ Addison (1974), pp. 25–26.
  75. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 12.
  76. ^ King (2010), pp. 169–70.
  77. ^ Hill (2002), p. 120.
  78. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 12.
  79. ^ Stacey (2002), p. 60.
  80. ^ Jackson (1958), p. 31.
  81. ^ Hill (2002), pp. 117, 117n36.
  82. ^ Hill (2002), p. 117n35.
  83. ^ a b c Silcox (2015), p. 13.
  84. ^ Jackson (1958), p. 27.
  85. ^ Jackson (1933), p. 138, quoted in Roza (1997), pp. 20–21.
  86. ^ Murray (2006), p. 17.
  87. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 128.
  88. ^ King (2010), pp. 154–59.
  89. ^ Harris (1964), quoted in Silcox (2006), p. 127.
  90. ^ Hill (2002), p. 124.
  91. ^ a b Wadland (2002), p. 105.
  92. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 125.
  93. ^ a b c Wadland (2002), p. 105n70.
  94. ^ Murray (2002b), p. 313.
  95. ^ Addison & Harwood (1969), p. 32.
  96. ^ Murray (2004), p. 108.
  97. ^ Hill (2002), pp. 125–26.
  98. ^ a b c d Hill (2002), p. 126.
  99. ^ Waddington & Waddington (2016), p. 131.
  100. ^ Jackson (1958), pp. 53–54.
  101. ^ a b c Hunter (2002), p. 40.
  102. ^ Davies (1930), pp. 29–31, quoted in Hunter (2002), p. 40.
  103. ^ Thomson (1956), pp. 21–24, quoted in Hunter (2002), p. 40.
  104. ^ Colgate (1946), p. 15, quoted in Hunter (2002), p. 40.
  105. ^ Murray (2002a), p. 300–01.
  106. ^ Hunter (2002), p. 41.
  107. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 14.
  108. ^ Hill (2002), p. 131.
  109. ^ Hill (2002), p. 133.
  110. ^ Wadland (2002), p. 102.
  111. ^ Ghent (1949), quoted in Hill (2002), p. 131.
  112. ^ Addison & Harwood (1969), p. 46.
  113. ^ a b Addison & Harwood (1969), p. 84.
  114. ^ a b Little (1970), p. 179.
  115. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 13.
  116. ^ Hill (2002), p. 132n119.
  117. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 132.
  118. ^ Silcox (2015), pp. 12–13.
  119. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 136.
  120. ^ Landry (1990), p. 26.
  121. ^ Reid (1970), p. 93.
  122. ^ Stacey & Bishop (1996), p. 119.
  123. ^ Hill (2002), p. 136n134.
  124. ^ Reid (1969), pp. 49, 69.
  125. ^ Fairbairn (1916), quoted in Hill (2002), p. 136.
  126. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 139.
  127. ^ Hill (2002), pp. 136–37.
  128. ^ Kerr (1916), p. 13, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 137.
  129. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 137.
  130. ^ a b Silcox (2015), p. 16.
  131. ^ Reid (1970), p. 126.
  132. ^ Hill (2002), pp. 137–38.
  133. ^ a b Hill (2002), p. 138.
  134. ^ Murray (2002a), pp. 302–03.
  135. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 20.
  136. ^ Murray (2002a), pp. 303–04.
  137. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 17.
  138. ^ MacCallum (1918), pp. 375–85, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 139.
  139. ^ Fairley (1920), p. 246, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 139.
  140. ^ Forsey (1975), p. 188, quoted in Hill (2002), p. 139.
  141. ^ Hill (2002), pp. 140, 140n167.
  142. ^ a b Hill (2002), p. 141.
  143. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 18.
  144. ^ a b Murray (1999), p. 122.
  145. ^ Murray (2002a), pp. 304–05.
  146. ^ a b c d e Silcox & Town (2017), p. 49.
  147. ^ Robinson (1917), quoted in Hill (2002), p. 142, 333n182
  148. ^ Howland (1917).
  149. ^ Ranney (1931).
  150. ^ Fraser (1917), quoted in Hill (2002), p. 142, 333n184
  151. ^ a b Hill (2002), p. 142.
  152. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), pp. 49–50.
  153. ^ "Historic Leith Church". www.meaford.ca. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  154. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 213.
  155. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 240.
  156. ^ Klages (2016).
  157. ^ Hunter (2002), p. 39.
  158. ^ a b c d e f Silcox & Town (2017), p. 181.
  159. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 40.
  160. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 140.
  161. ^ Silcox (2015), pp. 30, 48.
  162. ^
  163. ^ Silcox (2015), pp. 59–60.
  164. ^ Davies (1935), pp. 108–09, quoted in Hill (2002), pp. 133–34.
  165. ^ Little (1970), pp. 187–89.
  166. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), pp. 181–85.
  167. ^ Brown (1998), pp. 151, 158.
  168. ^ a b Murray (2011), p. 6.
  169. ^ Webster-Cook & Ruggles (2002), pp. 146–47.
  170. ^ a b Silcox & Town (2017), pp. 181–82.
  171. ^ Murray (2006), p. 92.
  172. ^ Jessup (2007), p. 188.
  173. ^ Dawn (2007), p. 193.
  174. ^ Dejardin (2011).
  175. ^ Silcox (2015), pp. 72–73.
  176. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 73.
  177. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 212: "[Thomson's sketches] directly inspired and informed the work of his colleagues, particularly Jackson, Lismer, MacDonald and Lawren Harris ..."
    Murray (1990), p. 155: "... Thomson's way of painting strongly influenced Carmichael."
  178. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 50.
  179. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 19.
  180. ^ Lismer (1934), pp. 163–64, quoted in Murray (1999), p. 114.
  181. ^ MacCallum (1918), pp. 379–80.
  182. ^ Murray (1999), p. 8.
  183. ^ Murray (1999), p. v.
  184. ^ a b Murray (1999), p. 7.
  185. ^ Halkes (2003), p. 99.
  186. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 69.
  187. ^ Murray (1999), p. 15.
  188. ^ a b c Hill (2002), p. 129.
  189. ^ Hill (2002), p. 129n106.
  190. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 27.
  191. ^ Silcox (2006), p. 211.
  192. ^ a b Silcox (2015), p. 28.
  193. ^ King (2010), pp. 182–83.
  194. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 58.
  195. ^ a b Silcox (2015), p. 38.
  196. ^ a b Silcox & Town (2017), p. 221.
  197. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), pp. 221, 236.
  198. ^ Silcox (2015), pp. 37–38.
  199. ^ Little (1970), p. 198.
  200. ^ a b Murray (2011), p. 70.
  201. ^ Hill (2002), p. 134n127.
  202. ^ a b Silcox (2006), p. 75.
  203. ^ Murray (1986), p. 41.
  204. ^ King (2010), p. 182.
  205. ^ Murray (2002c), pp. 12, 102.
  206. ^ a b Murray (2011), p. 50.
  207. ^ Murray (2002c), p. 12.
  208. ^ Murray (2011), p. 52.
  209. ^ Murray (2002c), p. 100.
  210. ^ Murray (2002c), p. 98.
  211. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 96.
  212. ^ Murray (1986), p. 58.
  213. ^ Murray (2002c), pp. 14, 106.
  214. ^ Murray (2011), p. 54.
  215. ^ Murray (2002c), pp. 13, 98.
  216. ^ a b Hunter (2002), p. 30.
  217. ^ Jackson (1958), quoted in Sloan (2010), pp. 70–71 & Silcox (2006), p. 211.
  218. ^ Silcox (2006), pp. 211, 255–56.
  219. ^ Strickland (1996), p. 19, quoted in Hunter (2002), p. 30.
  220. ^ Silcox (2006), pp. 210–11.
  221. ^ Nelles (1974), p. 51, quoted in Walton (2007), p. 142, 142n9
  222. ^ Murray (1971), p. 23, quoted in Walton (2007), p. 142, 142n10
  223. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 72.
  224. ^ Walton (2007), p. 143.
  225. ^ Jackson (1919), p. 2, quoted in Walton (2007), p. 143n19
  226. ^ a b Hunter (2002), p. 32.
  227. ^ a b c Silcox (2006), p. 76.
  228. ^ a b Silcox & Town (2017), p. 124.
  229. ^ a b Wadland (2002), p. 99.
  230. ^ Murray (2011), p. 96.
  231. ^ Lismer (1934), pp. 163–64, quoted in Hunter (2002), p. 35.
  232. ^ Dejardin (2018), pp. 17, 194.
  233. ^ Murray (1998), pp. 98–101, quoted in Grace (2004a), p. 81
  234. ^ Grace (2004a), p. 96.
  235. ^ Silcox (2015), p. 66.
  236. ^ Vikander (2018).
  237. ^ The Canadian Press (2018).
  238. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), p. 182; Silcox (2015), p. 74.
  239. ^ Dellandrea (2017).
  240. ^ Murray (1994a), pp. 3, 4.
  241. ^ a b Lederman (2021).
  242. ^ "Tom Thomson Art Gallery". City of Owen Sound. June 2018.
  243. ^ Dexter (1968).
  244. ^ "Leith United Church | Heritage Meaford". www.heritagemeaford.com. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  245. ^ Silcox & Town (2017), pp. 236–37.
  246. ^ Hunter (2002), pp. 28–29.

Sources edit

Books

  • Addison, Ottelyn; Harwood, Elizabeth (1969). Tom Thomson: The Algonquin Years. Toronto: Ryerson Press.
  • Addison, Ottelyn (1974). Early Days in Algonquin Park. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson. ISBN 978-0-07077-786-6.
  • Brown, W. Douglas (1998). "The Arts and Crafts Architecture of Eden Smith". In Latham, David (ed.). Scarlet Hunters: Pre-Raphaelitism in Canada. Toronto: Archives of Canadian Art. ISBN 978-1-89423-400-9.
  • Colgate, William, ed. (1946). Two Letters of Tom Thomson, 1915 and 1916. Weston: Old Rectory Press.
  • Davies, Blodwen (1930). Paddle & Palette: The Story of Tom Thomson. Toronto: Ryerson Press.
  • ——————— (1935). A Study of Tom Thomson: The Story of a Man Who Looked for Beauty and for Truth in the Wilderness. Toronto: Discuss Press.
  • Dawn, Leslie (2007). "The Britishness of Canadian Art". 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 978-0-77353-244-1.
  • Dejardin, Ian A. C. (2011). Painting Canada: Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. London: Dulwich Picture Gallery. ISBN 978-0-85667-686-4.
  • ———————— (2018). "Dazzle and Kick: The Life of David Milne". In Milroy, Sarah; Dejardin, Ian A. C. (eds.). David Milne: Modern Painting. London: Philip Wilson Publishers. pp. 17–28. ISBN 978-1-78130-061-9.
  • Edwards, Ron (1976). Petawawa River Survey Sites: A History. Algonquin Region: Ministry of Natural Resources.
  • Forsey, William C. (1975). The Ontario Community Collects: A Survey of Canadian Painting from 1766 to the Present. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. ISBN 9780919876125.
  • Grace, Sherrill (2004a). Inventing Tom Thomson: From Biographical Fictions to Fictional Autobiographies and Reproductions. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-77352-752-2.
  • Harris, Lawren S. (1964). The Story of the Group of Seven. Toronto: Rous and Mann Press.
  • Hill, Charles (2002). "Tom Thomson, Painter". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 111–43. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • Humeniuk, Gregory (2020). "Chronology". In Dejardin, Ian A. C.; Milroy, Sarah (eds.). A Like Vision: The Group of Seven & Tom Thomson. Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions. pp. 314–21. ISBN 978-1-77310-205-4.
  • Hunter, Andrew (2002). "Mapping Tom". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 19–46. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • Jackson, A. Y. (1958). A Painter's Country. Toronto: Clarke Irwin.
  • Jessup, Lynda (2007). "Art for a Nation". 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 978-0-77353-244-1.
  • King, Ross (2010). Defiant Spirits: The Modernist Revolution of the Group of Seven. Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 978-1-55365-807-8.
  • Klages, Gregory (2016). The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson: Separating Fact from Fiction. Toronto: Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-45973-196-7.
  • Landry, Pierre (1990). The MacCallum-Jackman Cottage Mural Paintings. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada. ISBN 978-0-888-84598-6.
  • Little, William T. (1970). The Tom Thomson Mystery. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd.
  • Lloyd, Donald L. (2000). Canoeing Algonquin Park. Toronto: Donald L. Lloyd. ISBN 978-0-96865-560-3.
  • MacGregor, Roy (2010). Northern Light: The Enduring Mystery of Tom Thomson and the Woman Who Loved Him. Toronto: Random House Canada. ISBN 978-0-30735-739-7.
  • McKenna, Ed (1976). A Systematic Approach to the History of the Forest Industry in Algonquin Park, 1835–1913, with an Evaluation of Algonquin Park's Historical Resources and an Assessment of Algonquin Park's Historical Zone System. Algonquin Region: Ministry of Natural Resources.
  • Murray, Joan (1971). The Art of Tom Thomson. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario.
  • —————— (1986). The Best of Tom Thomson. Edmonton: Hurtig. ISBN 978-0-88830-299-1.
  • —————— (1994a). Tom Thomson: The Last Spring. Toronto: Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-55002-218-6.
  • —————— (1998). Tom Thomson: Design for A Canadian Hero. Toronto: Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-55002-315-2.
  • —————— (1999). Tom Thomson: Trees. Toronto: McArthur & Co. ISBN 978-1-55278-092-3.
  • —————— (2002a). "Tom Thomson's Letters". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 297–306. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • —————— (2002b). "Chronology". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 307–17. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • —————— (2002c). Flowers: J. E. H. MacDonald, Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. Toronto: McArthur & Co. ISBN 978-1-55278-326-9.
  • —————— (2004). Water: Lawren Harris and the Group of Seven. Toronto: McArthur & Co. pp. 108–15. ISBN 978-1-55278-457-0.
  • —————— (2006). Rocks: Franklin Carmichael, Arthur Lismer, and the Group of Seven. Toronto: McArthur & Co. pp. 92–97. ISBN 978-1-55278-616-1.
  • —————— (2011). A Treasury of Tom Thomson. Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 978-1-55365-886-3.
  • Nelles, H. V. (1974). The Politics of Development: Forests, Mines and Hydro-Electric Power in Ontario, 1849-1941. Toronto.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Reid, Dennis (1969). The MacCallum Bequest. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada.
  • —————— (1970). The Group of Seven. Ottawa: The National Gallery of Canada.
  • Robson, Albert H. (1932). Canadian Landscape Painters. Toronto: Ryerson Press.
  • ———————— (1937). Tom Thomson: Painter of Our North Country, 1877–1917. Toronto: Ryerson Press.
  • 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. Richmond Hill: Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1-55407-154-8.
  • ——————— (2015). Tom Thomson: Life and Work. Toronto: Art Canada Institute. ISBN 978-1-48710-075-9.
  • ———————; Town, Harold (2017). Tom Thomson: The Silence and the Storm (Revised, Expanded ed.). Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 978-1-44344-234-3.
  • Sloan, Johanne (2010). Joyce Wieland's the Far Shore. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-44261-060-6.
  • Stacey, Robert; Bishop, Hunter (1996). J. E. H. MacDonald, Designer: An Anthology of Graphic Design, Illustration and Lettering. Ottawa: Archives of Canadian Art, Carleton University Press. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • Stacey, Robert (1998). "Making Us See the Light: Franklin Brownell's 'Middle Passage'". North by South: The Art of Peleg Franklin Brownell (1857–1946). Ottawa: Ottawa Art Gallery. ISBN 978-1-89510-847-7.
  • ——————— (2002). "Tom Thomson as Applied Artist". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 47–63. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • Strickland, Dan (1996). Trees of Algonquin Provincial Park. Toronto: Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources. ISBN 978-1-89570-920-9.
  • 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.
  • Wadland, John (2002). "Tom Thomson's Places". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 85–109. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • Walton, Paul H. (2007). "The Group of Seven and Northern Development". 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 978-0-77353-244-1.
  • Webster-Cook, Sandra; Ruggles, Anne (2002). "Technical Studies on Thomson's Materials and Working Methods". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 145–51. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.

Articles

  • Canadian Press, The (May 30, 2018). "Tom Thomson sketch discovered in Edmonton basement sells for $481K at auction". Toronto Star. Retrieved August 19, 2018.
  • Dellandrea, Jon S. (July–August 2017). "Brush with Infamy". Literary Review of Canada. Vol. 26, no. 6. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  • Dexter, Gail (June 1, 1968). "Tom Thomson's dollar-a-month shack becomes a Group of Seven shrine". Toronto Star.
  • Fairbairn, Margaret (March 11, 1916). "Some Pictures at the Art Gallery". Toronto Daily Star.
  • Fairley, Barker (March 1920). "Tom Thomson and Others". The Rebel. 3 (6): 244–48.
  • Ghent, Percy (November 8, 1949). "Tom Thomson at Island Camp, Round Lake, November, 1915". Toronto Telegram.
  • Halkes, Petra (Summer 2003). "Richard Gorman". Canadian Art. 20 (2): 99–100.
  • Jackson, A. Y. (1919). Foreword. Catalogue of an Exhibition of Paintings by the Late Tom Thomson, March 1 to March 21, 1919. By Arts Club of Montreal.
  • —————— (1933). "J. E. H. MacDonald". The Canadian Forum. 13: 136–38.
  • Kerr, Estelle M. (March 25, 1916). "At the Sign of the Maple". Canadian Courier. Vol. 19, no. 17.
  • Lederman, Marsha (December 23, 2021). "Tom Thomson art exhibition shines spotlight on issues of authenticity". The Globe and Mail. from the original on January 2, 2022.
  • Lismer, Arthur (January 1934). "The West Wind". McMaster Monthly. 43 (4): 163–64.
  • MacCallum, James (March 31, 1918). "Tom Thomson: Painter of the North". Canadian Magazine. pp. 375–85.
  • MacDonald, J. E. H. (November 1917). "A Landmark of Canadian Art". The Rebel. 2 (2): 45–50.
  • Murray, Joan (May 1990). "Carmichael's Triumph?". Journal of Canadian Studies. 25 (2): 155–59. doi:10.3138/jcs.25.2.155. S2CID 151323505.
  • Thomson, Margaret (Spring 1956). "Margaret Thomson Reminiscences of Tom Thomson". New Frontiers. 5 (1): 21–24.
  • Vikander, Tessa (May 9, 2018). "Tom Thomson sketch heads to Toronto auction block after languishing in Edmonton basement". Toronto Star. Retrieved August 19, 2018.

Archives and letters

  • Fraser, J. S. "Telegram to John Thomson" (July 16, 1917) [Telegram]. Tom Thomson Collection, File: 1.3, ID: MG30-D284. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada.
  • Howland, Gordon W. "Copy of G. W. Howland's affidavit (Originals withdrawn from circulation. Copies available on microfilm C-4579)" (July 17, 1917). 11, Fonds: Blodwen Davies fond, ID: MG30-D38. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada.
  • Ranney, A. E. "Letter to Blodwen Davies (Original withdrawn from circulation. Copies available on microfilm C-4579)" (May 7, 1931). 11, Fonds: Blodwen Davies fond, ID: MG30 D38. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada.
  • Rossell, Leonard. "Reminiscences of Grip, Members of the Group of Seven and Tom Thomson" (c. 1951). Tom Thomson Collection, File: T485.R82, ID: MG30-D284. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada.
  • Robinson, Mark. "Mark Robinson's Daily journal" (July 16–18, 1917) [Journal entry]. Addison family, Fonds: Addison family fonds, ID: 97-011. Peterborough: Trent University Archives.

Further reading edit

Books and catalogues

  • Boulet, Roger (1982). The Canadian Earth and Tom Thomson. Cerebrus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-13112-953-5.
  • Hubbard, R. H. (1962). Tom Thomson. Toronto: Society for Art Publications/McClelland and Stewart.
  • Jackson, A. Y. (1935). Foreword. A Study of Tom Thomson: The Story of a Man Who Looked for Beauty and for Truth in the Wilderness. By Davies, Blodwen. Toronto: Discus Press.
  • Littlefield, Angie (2017). Tom Thomson's Fine Kettle of Friends: Biography, History, Art and Food. Toronto: Marangi Editions. ISBN 978-0-99583-180-3.
  • MacCallum, J. M. (1937). Tom Thomson: Painter of the North. Toronto: Mellors Gallery.
  • MacGregor, Roy (1980). Shorelines: a Novel. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 978-0-77105-459-4.
  • Millard, Laura (1998). Algonquin Memories: Tom Thomson in Algonquin Park. Owen Sound: Thompson Books.
  • Milroy, Sarah; Dejardin, Ian A. C. (2023). Tom Thomson: North Star. Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions with McMichael Canadian Art Collection. ISBN 978-1-77310-320-4.
  • Murray, Joan (1994b). Northern Lights: Masterpieces of Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. Toronto: Key Porter. ISBN 978-0-88665-347-7.
  • —————— (1996). Tom Thomson: A Sketchbook. Toronto: Golden Press.
  • Northway, Mary L.; Edmison, J. Alex; Ebbs, J. Harry; Ebbs, John W. (1970a). Nominigan: A Casual History. Toronto.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Northway, Mary L. (1970b). Nominigan: The Early Years. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Poling, Jim (2003). Tom Thomson: The Life and Mysterious Death of the Famous Canadian Painter. Altitude Publishing. ISBN 978-1-55153-950-8.
  • Reid, Dennis (1975). Tom Thomson, The Jack Pine. Masterpieces in the National Gallery of Canada. Vol. 5. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada.
  • —————— (2002). "Tom Thomson and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Toronto". In Reid, Dennis (ed.). Tom Thomson. Toronto/Ottawa: Art Gallery of Ontario/National Gallery of Canada. pp. 65–83. ISBN 978-1-55365-493-3.
  • Saunders, A. (1947). Algonquin Story. Toronto: Department of Lands and Forests.
  • Silcox, David (2002). Tom Thomson: An Introduction to His Life and Art. Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1-55297-682-1.
  • Stanners, Sarah (2017). Passion Over Reason: Tom Thomson & Joyce Wieland. Kleinburg: McMichael Canadian Art Collection. ISBN 978-1-48680-480-1.
  • Taylor, Geoff (2017). Tom Thomson's Last Bonfire. Burnstown Publishing House. ISBN 978-1-77257-159-2.
  • Town, Harold (1965). "The Pathfinder". In Massey, Vincent (ed.). Great Canadians: Canadian Centennial Library. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.
  • Wadland, John (1978). Ernest Thompson Seton: Man in Nature and the Progressive Era, 1880–1915. New York: Arno. ISBN 978-0-40510-736-8.
  • Zeller, Suzanne (1994). "William Brodie". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. 1901–1910. Vol. 13. University of Toronto Press: Toronto. pp. 112–14. ISBN 978-0-80203-998-9.

Journal articles

  • Bordo, Jonathan (1992–93). "Jack Pine: Wilderness Sublime or the Erasure of the Aboriginal Presence from the Canadian Landscape". Journal of Canadian Studies. 27 (4): 98–128. doi:10.3138/jcs.27.4.98. S2CID 141350945.
  • Buchanan, Donald W. (August 1946). "Tom Thomson, Painter of the True North". Canadian Geographic Journal. 33 (2): 98–100.
  • Cameron, Ross D. (1999). "Tom Thomson, Antimodernism, and the Ideal of Manhood". Journal of the Canadian Historical Association. 10: 185. doi:10.7202/030513ar.
  • Comfort, C. (Spring 1951). "Georgian Bay Legacy". Canadian Art. 8 (3): 106–09.
  • Corbeil, Marie-Claude; Moffatt, Elizabeth A.; Sirois, P. Jane; Legate, Kris M. (2000). "The Materials and Techniques of Tom Thomson". Journal of the Canadian Association for Conservation. 25: 3–10.
  • Jessup, Lynda (Spring 2002). "The Group of Seven and the Tourist Landscape in Western Canada, or the More Things Change ...". Journal of Canadian Studies. 37: 144–79. doi:10.3138/jcs.37.1.144. S2CID 141215113.
  • Lismer, Arthur (1947). "Tom Thomson, 1877–1917: A Tribute to a Canadian Painter". Canadian Art. 5 (2): 59–62.
  • Little, R. P. (1955). "Some Recollections of Tom Thomson and Canoe Lake". Culture. 16: 200–08.
  • Machardy, Carolyn (1999). "An Inquiry into the Success of Tom Thomson's The West Wind". University of Toronto Quarterly. 68 (3): 768–89. doi:10.3138/utq.68.3.768. S2CID 161625867.
  • Mortimer-Lamb, Harold (March 29, 1919). "Letter to the editor, with attached draft article". Studio Magazine.
  • —————————— (August 1919). "Studio-Talk: Tom Thomson". The Studio. 77 (317): 119–26.
  • Murray, Joan (August 1991). "The World of Tom Thomson". Journal of Canadian Studies. 26 (3): 5–51. doi:10.3138/jcs.26.3.5. S2CID 151998513.
  • Pringle, Gertrude (April 10, 1926). "Tom Thomson: The Man, Painter of the Wilds Was a Very Unique Individuality". Saturday Night. 41 (21): 5.
  • Reid, Dennis (1971b). "Photographs by Tom Thomson (1970)". National Gallery of Canada Bulletin/Galerie Nationale du Canada Bulletin. 16: 2–36.
  • Sharpe, Noble (October 30, 1956). Re: Human Bones received from unmarked grave in Algonquin Park. Documents supplied in response to Freedom of Information and Protection of Personal Privacy Act request. Centre for Forensic Sciences, Toronto.
  • ———————— (June 1970). "The Canoe Lake Mystery". Canadian Society of Forensic Science. 3 (2): 34–40. doi:10.1080/00085030.1970.10757271.

Films

  • Hozer, Michèle (Director) and Peter Raymont (Producer) (2011). (Filmstrip). Toronto: White Pine Pictures. Archived from the original on January 15, 2019. Retrieved May 23, 2019.
  • McInnes, Graham (Director) (1944). West Wind (35mm film, colour). National Film Board of Canada.
  • Vaisbord, David (Director) (2005). Dark Pines: A Documentary Investigation into the Death of Tom Thomson (DV Cam, colour). Vancouver: Laughing Mountain Communications.
  • Wieland, Joyce (1976). The Far Shore (35mm film, colour). Toronto: Far Shore Inc.

The Group of Seven and Canadian art

  • Cole, Douglas (Summer 1978). "Artists, Patrons and Public: An Inquiry into the Success of the Group of Seven". Journal of Canadian Studies. 13 (2): 69–78. doi:10.3138/jcs.13.2.69. S2CID 152198969.
  • Colgate, William (1943). Canadian Art: Its Origin and Development. Toronto: Ryerson Press.
  • Davis, Ann (1992). The Logic of Ecstasy: Canadian Mystical Painting, 1920–1940. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-80206-861-3.
  • Dawn, Leslie (2006). National Visions, National Blindness: Canadian Art and Identities in the 1920s. Vancouver: UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-77481-218-4.
  • Djwa, Sandra (1992). "Who is This Man Smith?: Second and Third Thoughts on Canadian Modernism". In New, W. H. (ed.). Inside the Poem: Essays and Poems in Honour of Donald Stephens. Toronto: Oxford Press. pp. 205–15. ISBN 978-0-19540-925-3.
  • Duval, Paul (1972). Four Decades: The Canadian Group of Painters and Their Contemporaries, 1930–1970. Toronto: Clarke Irwin. ISBN 978-0-77200-553-3.
  • ————— (1978). The Tangled Garden. Toronto: Cerebrus/Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-92001-608-4.
  • Eisenberg, Evan (1998). The Ecology of Eden. Toronto: Random House of Canada. ISBN 978-0-37570-560-1.
  • Grace, Sherrill E. (2004b). Canada and the Idea of North. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-77353-253-3.
  • Harper, J. Russell (1966). Painting in Canada: A History. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Harris, Lawren (July 1926). "The Revelation of Art in Canada". Canadian Theosophist. 7: 85–88.
  • —————— (1929). "Creative Art and Canada". In Brooker, Bertram (ed.). Yearbook of the Arts in Canada, 1928–1929. Toronto: Macmillan Company of Canada. pp. 177–86.
  • —————— (October 1943). "The Function of Art". Art Gallery Bulletin [Vancouver Art Gallery]. 2: 2–3.
  • —————— (1948). "The Group of Seven in Canadian History". Canadian Historical Association: Report of the Annual Meeting held at Victoria and Vancouver, 16–19 June 1948. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 28–38.
  • Hill, Charles C. (1995). The Group of Seven: Art for a Nation. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada. ISBN 978-0-77106-716-7.
  • Housser, F. B. (1926). A Canadian Art Movement: The Story of the Group of Seven. Toronto: Macmillan.
  • Hubbard, R. H. (1963). The Development of Canadian Art. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada.
  • Jackson, A. Y. (Summer 1957). "Box-car Days in Algoma 1919–20". Canadian Art. 14: 136–41.
  • Larisey, Peter (1993). Light for a Cold Land: Lawren Harris's Life and Work. Toronto: Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1-55002-188-2.
  • MacDonald, J. E. H. (March 22, 1919). "The Canadian Spirit in Art". The Statesman. 35: 6–7.
  • ————————— (December 1919). "A.C.R. 10557". The Lamps: 33–39.
  • MacDonald, Thoreau (1944). The Group of Seven. Toronto: Ryerson Press.
  • MacTavish, Newton (1925). The Fine Arts in Canada. Toronto: Macmillan.
  • Martinsen, Hanna (1984). "The Scandinavian Impact on the Group of Seven's Vision of the Canadian Landscape". Konsthistorisk Tidskrift. L111: 1–17. doi:10.1080/00233608408604038.
  • McInns, Graham C. (1950). Canadian Art. Toronto: Macmillan.
  • McKay, Marylin J. (2011). Picturing the Land: Narrating Territories in Canadian Landscape Art, 1500–1950. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-77353-817-7.
  • Mellen, Peter (1970). The Group of Seven. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 9780771058158.
  • Murray, Joan (1984). The Best of the Group of Seven. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers. ISBN 978-0-77106-674-0.
  • O'Brian, John; White, Peter, eds. (2007). Beyond Wilderness: The Group of Seven, Canadian Identity, and Contemporary Art. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-77353-244-1.
  • Reid, Dennis (1971a). A Bibliography of the Group of Seven. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada.
  • Rosenblum, Robert (1975). Modern Painting and the Northern Romantic Tradition: Friedrich to Rothko. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06430-057-5.

External links edit

thomson, people, with, similar, names, thomas, thomson, disambiguation, thomas, thompson, disambiguation, thomas, john, thomson, august, 1877, july, 1917, canadian, artist, active, early, 20th, century, during, short, career, produced, roughly, sketches, small. For people with similar names see Thomas Thomson disambiguation and Thomas Thompson disambiguation Thomas John Thomson August 5 1877 July 8 1917 was a Canadian artist active in the early 20th century During his short career he produced roughly 400 oil sketches on small wood panels and approximately 50 larger works on canvas His works consist almost entirely of landscapes depicting trees skies lakes and rivers He used broad brush strokes and a liberal application of paint to capture the beauty and colour of the Ontario landscape Thomson s accidental death by drowning at 39 shortly before the founding of the Group of Seven is seen as a tragedy for Canadian art Tom ThomsonThomson c 1910 1917BornThomas John Thomson 1877 08 05 August 5 1877Claremont Ontario CanadaDiedJuly 8 1917 1917 07 08 aged 39 Canoe Lake Algonquin Park Ontario CanadaResting placeLeith United Church Cemetery Grey County Ontario Canada44 37 N 80 53 W 44 62 N 80 88 W 44 62 80 88 Leith United Church Cemetery NationalityCanadianEducationSelf taught note 1 Known forPaintingNotable workNorthern River 1914 15 Spring Ice 1915 16 The West Wind 1916 17 The Jack Pine 1916 17 MovementArt Nouveau Arts and Crafts Group of Seven note 2 The Jack Pine Winter 1916 17 127 9 139 8 cm National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Black Spruce and Maple Fall 1915 Sketch note 3 Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Raised in rural Ontario Thomson was born into a large family of farmers and displayed no immediate artistic talent He worked several jobs before attending a business college eventually developing skills in penmanship and copperplate writing At the turn of the 20th century he was employed in Seattle and Toronto as a pen artist at several different photoengraving firms including Grip Ltd There he met those who eventually formed the Group of Seven including J E H MacDonald Lawren Harris Frederick Varley Franklin Carmichael and Arthur Lismer In May 1912 he visited Algonquin Park a major public park and forest reservation in Central Ontario for the first time It was there that he acquired his first sketching equipment and following MacDonald s advice began to capture nature scenes He became enraptured with the area and repeatedly returned typically spending his winters in Toronto and the rest of the year in the Park His earliest paintings were not outstanding technically but showed a good grasp of composition and colour handling His later paintings vary in composition and contain vivid colours and thickly applied paint His later work has had a great influence on Canadian art paintings such as The Jack Pine and The West Wind have taken a prominent place in the culture of Canada and are some of the country s most iconic works Thomson developed a reputation during his lifetime as a veritable outdoorsman talented in both fishing and canoeing although his skills in the latter have been contested The circumstances of his drowning on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park linked with his image as a master canoeist led to unsubstantiated but persistent rumours that he had been murdered or committed suicide Although he died before the formal establishment of the Group of Seven Thomson is often considered an unofficial member His art is typically exhibited with the rest of the Group s nearly all of which remains in Canada mainly at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg and the Tom Thomson Art Gallery in Owen Sound Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 Graphic design work 1 2 1 Seattle 1901 04 1 2 2 Toronto 1905 12 1 3 Painting career 1 3 1 Exploring Algonquin Park 1912 13 1 3 2 Early recognition 1914 15 1 3 3 Artistic peak 1916 17 1 4 Death 2 Art and technique 2 1 Artistic development 2 2 Series and themes 2 2 1 Trees 2 2 2 Skies 2 2 3 Nocturnes 2 2 4 Flowers 2 2 5 Industry in nature 2 2 6 People 3 Legacy and influence 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Citations 5 3 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife editEarly years edit Thomas John Tom Thomson was born on August 5 1877 in Claremont Ontario 6 the sixth of John and Margaret Thomson s ten children 7 He was raised in Leith Ontario near Owen Sound in the municipality of Meaford 8 Thomson and his siblings enjoyed both drawing and painting although he did not immediately display any major talents 7 He was eventually taken out of school for a year because of ill health including a respiratory problem variously described as weak lungs or inflammatory rheumatism 8 9 This gave him free time to explore the woods near his home and develop an appreciation of nature 7 The family were unsuccessful as farmers both Thomson and his father often abandoned their chores to go hiking hunting and fishing 10 Thomson regularly went on walks in Toronto with Dr William Brodie 1831 1909 his grandmother s first cousin 11 12 Brodie was a well known entomologist ornithologist and botanist and Thomson s sister Margaret later recounted that they collected specimens on long walks together 13 14 Thomson was also enthusiastic about sports once breaking his toe while playing football 8 He was an excellent swimmer and fisherman inheriting his passion for the latter from his grandfather and father 15 Like most of those in his community he regularly attended church Some stories say that he sketched in the hymn books during services and entertained his sisters with caricatures of their neighbours His sisters later said that they had fun guessing who they were indicating that he was not necessarily adept at capturing people s likeness 8 nbsp Portrait of a young Tom Thomson c 1900 Each of Thomson s nine siblings received an inheritance from their paternal grandfather 15 Thomson received 2000 in 1898 but seems to have spent it quickly 16 A year later he entered a machine shop apprenticeship at an iron foundry owned by William Kennedy a close friend of his father but left only eight months later 15 17 Also in 1899 he volunteered to fight in the Second Boer War but was turned down because of a medical condition 18 He tried to enlist for the Boer War three times in all but was denied each time 8 In 1901 Thomson enrolled at Canada Business College in Chatham Ontario The school advertised instruction in stenography bookkeeping business correspondence and plain and ornamental penmanship 15 There he developed abilities in penmanship and copperplate necessary skills for a clerk 19 After graduating at the end of 1901 he travelled briefly to Winnipeg before leaving for Seattle in January 1902 joining his older brother George Thomson 15 19 16 George and cousin F R McLaren had established the Acme Business School in Seattle listed as the 11th largest business school in the United States 15 20 Thomson worked briefly as an elevator operator at The Diller Hotel By 1902 two more of his brothers Ralph and Henry had moved west to join the family s new school 17 Graphic design work edit Seattle 1901 04 edit After studying at the business school for six months Thomson was hired at Maring amp Ladd as a pen artist draftsman and etcher 15 19 21 He mainly produced business cards brochures and posters as well as three colour printing 19 21 Having previously learned calligraphy he specialized in lettering drawing and painting 21 While working at Maring amp Ladd he was known to be stubbornly independent his brother Fraser wrote that instead of completing his work according to the direction provided he would use his own design ideas which angered his boss 22 Thomson may have also worked as a freelance commercial designer but there are no extant examples of such work 23 He eventually moved on to a local engraving company Despite a good salary he left by the end of 1904 He quickly returned to Leith possibly prompted by a rejected marriage proposal after his brief summer romance with Alice Elinor Lambert 24 21 Lambert who never married later became a writer 25 in one of her stories she describes a young girl who refuses an artist s proposal and later regrets her decision 21 Toronto 1905 12 edit See also Grip Ltd nbsp Profile of Thomson wearing a suit and hat c 1905 10 During this time Thomson was known to dress well and spend his money on nice clothes and fine dining Thomson moved to Toronto in the summer of 1905 26 His first job upon his return to Canada was at the photo engraving firm Legg Brothers earning 11 a week 24 27 He spent his free time reading poetry and going to concerts the theatre and sporting events 28 In a letter to an aunt he wrote I love poetry best 29 Friends described him during this time as periodically erratic and sensitive with fits of unreasonable despondency Apart from buying art supplies he spent his money on expensive clothes fine dining and tobacco 27 Around this time he may have studied briefly with William Cruikshank a British artist who taught at the Ontario College of Art 1 Cruikshank was likely Thomson s only formal art instructor 3 In 1908 or 1909 Thomson joined Grip Ltd a firm in Toronto that specialized in design and lettering work note 4 Grip was the leading graphic design company in the country and introduced Art Nouveau metal engraving and the four colour process to Canada 35 Albert Robson then the art director at Grip recalled that Thomson s early work at the firm was mostly in lettering and decorative designs for booklets and labels 36 He wrote that Thomson made friends slowly but eventually found similar interests to his coworkers 37 Several of the employees at Grip had been members of the Toronto Art Students League a group of newspaper artists illustrators and commercial artists active between 1886 and 1904 38 The members sketched in parts of eastern Canada and published an annual calendar with illustrations depicting Canadian history and rural life 39 The senior artist at Grip J E H MacDonald encouraged his staff to paint outside in their spare time to better hone their skills 40 It was at Grip that many of the eventual members of the Group of Seven would meet In December 1910 artist William Smithson Broadhead was hired joined by Arthur Lismer in February 1911 41 Robson eventually hired Frederick Varley followed by Franklin Carmichael in April 1911 32 42 Although Thomson was not himself a member 43 44 it was at the Arts and Letters Club that MacDonald introduced Thomson to Lawren Harris 42 The club was considered the centre of living culture in Toronto providing an informal environment for the artistic community 45 Every member of what would become the original Group of Seven had now met 3 MacDonald left Grip in November 1911 to do freelance work and spend more time painting 46 after the Ontario government purchased his canvas By the River Early Spring 1911 41 nbsp Portrait of an Old Lake Captain c 1906 59 7 x 34 3 cm Beaverbrook Art Gallery Fredericton nbsp Design for a Stained Glass Window c 1905 08 34 2 x 17 1 cm Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Decorative Landscape Quotation from Maurice Maeterlinck c 1908 32 6 x 19 5 cm Ink on paper McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Decorative Illustration Blessing by Robert Burns 1909 34 9 x 24 1 cm Watercolour graphite and ink on paper McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg Painting career edit Exploring Algonquin Park 1912 13 edit See also Drowned Land Algonquin Provincial Park and James MacCallum nbsp Thomson fishing in Algonquin Park c 1914 16 He was enamoured with the Park and many of his works were painted in the area Algonquin Park was established in 1893 by Oliver Mowat and the Ontario Legislature Covering eighteen rectangular townships in Central Ontario the Park was created to provide a space dedicated to recreation wildlife and watershed protection though logging operations continued to be permitted 47 Thomson learned of the Park from fellow artist Tom McLean 48 49 In May 1912 aged 34 he first visited the Park venturing through the area on a canoe trip with his Grip colleague H B Ben Jackson 50 Together they took the Grand Trunk Railway from Toronto to Scotia Junction then transferred to the Ottawa Arnprior and Parry Sound Railway arriving at Canoe Lake Station 49 McLean introduced Thomson to the Park superintendent G W Barlett 48 51 Thomson and Jackson later met ranger Harry Bud Callighen while they camped nearby on Smoke Lake 48 52 It was also at this time that Thomson acquired his first sketching equipment 48 53 He did not yet take painting seriously According to Jackson Thomson did not think his work would ever be taken seriously in fact he used to chuckle over the idea 54 Instead they spent most of their time fishing 54 except for a few notes skylines and colour effects 48 During the same trip Thomson read Izaak Walton s 1653 fishing guide The Compleat Angler 55 Primarily a fisherman s bible the book also provided a philosophy of how to live similar to the one described in Henry David Thoreau s 1854 book Walden or Life in the Woods a reflection on simple living in natural surroundings 55 His time in Algonquin Park gave him an ideal setting to imitate Walton s contemplative life 56 Ben Jackson wrote Tom was never understood by lots of people was very quiet modest and as a friend of mine spoke of him a gentle soul He cared nothing for social life but with one or two companions on a sketching and fishing trip with his pipe and Hudson Bay tobacco going he was a delightful companion If a party or the boys got a little loud or rough Tom would get his sketching kit and wander off alone At times he liked to be that way wanted to be by himself commune sic with nature 56 Upon returning to Toronto Jackson published an article about his and Thomson s experience in the Park in the Toronto Sunday World included in which were several illustrations 48 After this initial experience Thomson and another colleague William Broadhead went on a two month expedition going up the Spanish River and into Mississagi Forest Reserve today Mississagi Provincial Park 56 Thomson s transition from commercial art towards his own original style of painting became apparent around this time 57 58 Much of his artwork from this trip mainly oil sketches and photographs was lost during two canoe spills 57 the first was on Green Lake in a rain squall and the second in a series of rapids 59 note 5 In fall 1912 Albert Robson Grip s art director moved to the design firm Rous amp Mann 3 A month after returning to Toronto Thomson followed Robson and left Grip to join Rous amp Mann too 47 40 61 They were soon joined by Varley Carmichael and Lismer 59 Robson later spoke favourably of Thomson s loyalty calling him a most diligent reliable and capable craftsman 36 Robson s success in attracting great talent was well understood 62 Employee Leonard Rossell believed that the key to Robson s success was that the artists felt that he was interested in them personally and did all he could to further their progress Those who worked there were all allowed time off to pursue their studies Tom Thomson so far as I know never took definite lessons from anyone yet he progressed quicker than any of us But what he did was probably of more advantage to him He took several months off in the summer and spent them in Algonquin Park 63 nbsp Northern Lake Winter 1912 13 71 7 x 102 4 cm Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto In October MacDonald introduced Thomson to James MacCallum 59 A frequent visitor to the Ontario Society of Artists OSA exhibitions MacCallum was admitted to the Arts and Letters Club in January 1912 There he met artists such as John William Beatty Arthur Heming MacDonald and Harris 59 MacCallum eventually persuaded Thomson to leave Rous and Mann and start a painting career 47 In October 1913 MacCallum introduced Thomson to A Y Jackson later a founder of the Group of Seven 64 MacCallum recognized Thomson s and Jackson s talents and offered to cover their expenses for one year if they committed themselves to painting full time 65 66 MacCallum and Jackson both encouraged Thomson to take up painting seriously but he showed no enthusiasm The chances of earning a livelihood by it did not appear to him promising He was sensitive and independent and feared he might become an object of patronage 64 MacCallum wrote that when he first saw Thomson s sketches he recognized their truthfulness their feeling and their sympathy with the grim fascinating northland they made me feel that the North had gripped Thomson as it had gripped me since I was eleven when I first sailed and paddled through its silent places He described Thomson s paintings as dark muddy in colour tight and not wanting in technical defects 67 After Thomson s death MacCallum helped preserve and advocated for his work 66 Thomson accepted MacCallum s offer under the same terms offered to Jackson 64 He travelled around Ontario with his colleagues especially to the wilderness of Ontario which was to become a major source of inspiration Regarding Algonquin Park he wrote in a letter to MacCallum The best I can do does not do the place much justice in the way of beauty 68 He ventured to rural areas near Toronto and tried to capture the surrounding nature He may have worked as a fire ranger on the Mattagami reserve 69 Addison and Little suggest that he guided fishing tours 70 71 although Hill finds this unlikely since Thomson had only spent a few weeks in the Park the previous year 72 Thomson became as familiar with logging scenes as with nature in the Park and painted them both 73 While returning to Toronto in November 1912 Thomson stopped in Huntsville 72 74 The visit was possibly to meet with Winifred Trainor a woman whose family owned a cottage on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park Trainor was later rumoured to have been engaged to Thomson with a wedding planned for the late 1917 although little is known about their relationship 75 76 note 6 Thomson first exhibited with the OSA in March 1913 selling his painting Northern Lake 1912 13 to the Ontario Government for 250 equivalent to CAD 5 900 in 2021 77 78 The sale afforded him time to paint and sketch through the summer and fall of 1913 79 Sketch indicates that the work is a smaller oil work generally on wood panel The dimensions are often close to 21 6 26 7 cm 8 x 10 in but sometimes as small as 12 8 x 18 2 cm 51 16 x 73 16 in nbsp Old Lumber Dam Algonquin Park Spring 1912 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp The Canoe Spring or fall 1912 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Mississagi 1912 Sketch Private collection nbsp Evening Fall 1913 Sketch Thomson Collection Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Early recognition 1914 15 edit See also Northern River painting Spring Ice and Studio Building Toronto nbsp The Studio Building in Toronto where Thomson lived and worked from January 1914 through November 1915 Thomson often experienced self doubt A Y Jackson recalled that in the fall of 1914 Thomson threw his sketch box into the woods out of frustration 80 and was so shy he could hardly be induced to show his sketches 43 Harris expressed similar sentiments writing that Thomson had no opinion of his own work and would even throw burnt matches at his paintings 81 Several of the canvases he sent to exhibitions remained unsigned note 7 If someone praised one of his sketches he immediately gave it to them as a gift 43 A turning point in his career came in 1914 when the National Gallery of Canada under the directorship of Eric Brown began to acquire his paintings Although the money was not enough to live on the recognition was unheard of for an unknown artist 83 For several years he shared a studio and living quarters with fellow artists initially living in the Studio Building with Jackson in January 1914 Jackson described the Studio Building as a lively centre for new ideas experiments discussions plans for the future and visions of an art inspired by the Canadian countryside 84 It was there that Thomson after much self deprecation finally submitted to becoming a full time artist 85 They split the rent 22 a month on the ground floor while construction on the rest of the building was finished 28 After Jackson moved out in December to go to Montreal Carmichael took his place 28 86 87 Thomson and Carmichael shared a studio space through the winter 88 On March 3 1914 Thomson was nominated as a member of the OSA by Lismer and T G Greene He was elected on the 17th He did not participate in any of their activities beyond sending paintings for annual exhibitions 43 Harris described Thomson s strange working hours years later When he was in Toronto Tom rarely left the shack in the daytime and then only when it was absolutely necessary He took his exercise at night He would put on his snowshoes and tramp the length of the Rosedale ravine and out into the country and return before dawn 89 nbsp Thomson with his catch at Canoe Lake Algonquin Park c 1915 In late April 1914 Thomson arrived in Algonquin Park where he was joined by Lismer on May 9 They camped on Molly s Island in Smoke Lake travelling to Canoe Smoke Ragged Crown and Wolf Lakes 90 He spent his spring and summer divided between Georgian Bay and Algonquin Park visiting James MacCallum by canoe His travels during this time have proved difficult to discern with such a large amount of ground covered in such a short time painting the French River Byng Inlet Parry Sound and Go Home Bay from May 24 through August 10 91 H A Callighen a park ranger wrote in his journal that Thomson and Lismer left Algonquin Park on May 24 92 By May 30 Thomson was at Parry Sound and on June 1 was camped at the French River with MacCallum 92 93 Art historian Joan Murray noted that Thomson was at Go Home Bay for the next two months or at least until August 10 when he was seen again in Algonquin Park by Callighan 94 According to Wadland if this timeline is correct it would require an extraordinary canoeist The difficulty is augmented by the fact of stopping to sketch at intervals along the way 93 Wadland suggested that Thomson may have travelled by train at some point and by steamship thereafter 91 Addison and Harwood instead said that Thomson had found much of the inland monotonously flat and the rapids ordinary 95 Wadland found this characterization unhelpful pointing out that the rapids Thomson had faced were hardly ordinary 93 nbsp Cottage on a Rocky Shore Summer 1914 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa MacCallum provided specific dates for two of Thomson s paintings May 30 and June 1 for Parry Sound Harbour and Spring French River respectively 92 96 These are some of the only instances of precise dating for his work 97 Cottage on a Rocky Shore is a depiction of MacCallum s cottage contrasted with the vast expanse of sky and water Evening Pine Island is of a nearby island MacCallum took Thomson to visit 98 He continued to paint around the islands until he departed probably because he found MacCallum s cottage too demanding socially writing to Varley that it was too much like north Rosedale 98 99 Thomson continued canoeing alone until he met with A Y Jackson at Canoe Lake in mid September Though World War I had erupted that year he and Jackson went on a canoe trip in October meeting up with Varley and his wife Maud as well as Lismer and his wife Esther and daughter Marjorie 98 This marked the first time three Group of Seven members painted together and the only time they worked with Thomson 58 83 In his 1958 autobiography A Painter s Country A Y Jackson wrote that Had it not been for the war the Group of Seven would have formed several years earlier and it would have included Thomson 100 Why Thomson did not serve in the war has been debated 101 Mark Robinson and Thomson s family said that he was turned down after multiple attempts to enlist likely due to his poor health and age but also possibly because he had flat feet 8 18 83 Blodwen Davies wrote that Thomson s artist friends tried to convince him to not risk his life but he decided to secretly volunteer anyway 102 Andrew Hunter has found this scenario to be improbable especially given that other artist friends did volunteer for the war such as A Y Jackson 101 Thomson s sister suggested that he was a pacifist and that he hated war and said simply in 1914 that he never would kill anyone but would like to help in a hospital if accepted 103 William Colgate wrote that Thomson brooded much upon the war and that he himself did not enlist Rumour has it that he tried and failed to pass the doctor This is doubtful 104 Edward Godin a companion said We had many discussions on the war As I remember it he did not think that Canada should be involved He was very outspoken in his opposition to Government patronage Especially in the Militia I do not think that he would offer himself for service I know up until that time he had not tried to enlist 101 There is only one verifiable example of Thomson s opinion on the war taken from a letter he wrote to J E H MacDonald in 1915 As with yourself I can t get used to the idea of A Y Jackson being in the machine and it is rotten that in this so called civilized age that such things can exist but since this war has started it will have to go on until one side wins out and of course there is no doubt which side it will be and we will see Jackson back on the job once more 105 106 nbsp In Algonquin Park Winter 1914 15 63 2 81 1 cm McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg With MacCallum s year of financial support over Thomson s financial future became uncertain 87 He briefly looked into applying for a position as a park ranger but balked after seeing that it could take months for the application to go through Instead he considered working in an engraving shop over the winter 98 He made little effort to sell his paintings preferring to give them away though he brought in some money from the paintings he sold 107 In mid November he donated In Algonquin Park to an exhibition organized to raise money for the Canadian Patriotic Fund It was sold to Marion Long for 50 equivalent to CAD 1 200 in 2021 87 In the spring of 1915 Thomson returned to Algonquin Park earlier than he had in any previous year and had already painted twenty eight sketches by April 22 From April through July he spent much of his time fishing assisting groups on several different lakes and sketching when he had time 108 In July he was invited to send paintings to the Nova Scotia Provincial Exhibition in September Because he was in Algonquin Park his friends selected three works to send two unidentified works from 1914 and the sketch Canadian Wildflowers 109 From the end of September to mid October he spent his time at Mowat a village on the north end of Canoe Lake 110 By November he was at Round Lake with Tom Wattie and Robert McComb 111 112 In late November he returned to Toronto and moved into a shack behind the Studio Building that Harris and MacCallum fixed up for him 113 114 renting it for 1 a month 115 note 8 In 1915 MacCallum commissioned MacDonald Lismer and Thomson to paint decorative panels for his cottage on Go Home Bay In October of that year MacDonald went up to take dimensions 119 120 Thomson produced four panels which were probably meant to go over the windows In April 1916 when MacDonald and Lismer went to install them they found that MacDonald s measurements were incorrect and the panels did not fit 121 122 note 9 nbsp Canoe Lake Spring 1914 Sketch Tom Thomson Art Gallery Owen Sound nbsp Smoke Lake Summer 1915 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Fire Swept Hills Summer or fall 1915 Sketch Thomson Collection Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Autumn Foliage Fall or winter 1915 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Spring Ice Winter 1915 16 72 0 102 3 cm National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Artistic peak 1916 17 edit See also The West Wind painting and The Jack Pine In March 1916 Thomson exhibited four canvases with the OSA In the Northland at that time titled The Birches Spring Ice Moonlight and October then titled The Hardwoods all of which were painted over the winter of 1915 16 Sir Edmund Walker and Eric Brown of the National Gallery of Canada wanted to purchase In the Northland but Montreal trustee Francis Shepherd convinced them to purchase Spring Ice instead 119 The reception of Thomson s paintings at this time was mixed Margaret Fairbairn of the Toronto Daily Star wrote Mr Tom Thomson s The Birches and The Hardwoods show a fondness for intense yellows and orange and strong blue altogether a fearless use of violent colour which can scarcely be called pleasing and yet which seems an exaggeration of a truthful feeling that time will temper 125 A more favourable take came from artist Wyly Grier in The Christian Science Monitor nbsp In the Northland Winter 1915 1916 note 10 101 7 x 114 5 cm Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Montreal Tom Thomson again reveals his capacity to be modern and remain individual His early pictures in which the quality of naivete had all the genuineness of the effort of the tyro and was not the counterfeit of it which is so much in evidence in the intensely rejuvenated works of the highly sophisticated showed the faculty for affectionate and truthful record by a receptive eye and faithful hand but his work today has reached higher levels of technical accomplishment His Moonlight Spring Ice and The Birches are among his best 127 In The Canadian Courier painter Estelle Kerr also spoke positively describing Thomson as one of the most promising of Canadian painters who follows the impressionist movement and his work reveals himself to be a fine colourist a clever technician and a truthful interpreter of the north land in its various aspects 128 In 1916 Thomson left for Algonquin Park earlier than any previous year evidenced by the many snow studies he produced at this time 129 In April or early May MacCallum Harris and his cousin Chester Harris joined Thomson at Cauchon Lake for a canoe trip 129 130 After MacCallum and Chester left Harris and Thomson paddled together to Aura Lee Lake 131 Thomson produced many sketches which varied in composition although they all had vivid colour and thickly applied paint 130 MacCallum was present when he painted his Sketch for The Jack Pine writing that the tree fell over onto Thomson before the sketch was completed He added that Harris thought the tree killed Thomson but he sprang up and continued painting 129 nbsp Tea Lake Dam Summer 1917 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg At the end of May Thomson took a job as a fire ranger stationed at Achray on Grand Lake with Ed Godin He followed the Booth Lumber Company s log drive down the Petawawa River to the north end of the park 132 He found that fire ranging and painting did not mix well together 133 writing I have done very little sketching this summer as the two jobs don t fit in When we are travelling two go together one for canoe and the other the pack And there s no place for a sketch outfit when your sic fire ranging We are not fired yet but I am hoping to get put off right away 134 He likely returned to Toronto in late October or early November 133 Over the following winter encouragement from Harris MacDonald and MacCallum saw Thomson move into the most productive portion of his career 135 with Thomson writing in a letter that he got quite a lot done 136 Despite this he did not submit any paintings to the OSA exhibition in the spring of 1917 126 It was during this time that he produced many of his most famous works including The Jack Pine and The West Wind 137 MacCallum suggested that several canvas works were unfinished including Woodland Waterfall The Pointers and The Drive 138 Barker Fairley similarly described The West Wind as unfinished 139 Charles Hill has written that there are no reasons to believe Woodland Waterfall was unfinished 126 Similarly while it has sometimes been suggested that The Drive was modified after Thomson s death 140 a reproduction from 1918 displays no discernible differences 141 Thomson returned to Canoe Lake at the beginning of April arriving early enough to paint the remaining snow and the ice breaking up on the surrounding lakes He had little money but wrote that he could manage for about a year On April 28 1917 he received a guide s licence Unlike previous years he remained at Mowat with Lieutenant Crombine and his wife Daphne Thomson invited Daphne Crombie to select something from his spring sketches as a gift and she selected Path Behind Mowat Lodge 142 Besides the deep love he had come to develop for Algonquin Park Thomson was beginning to show an eagerness to depict areas beyond the park and explore other northern subjects 143 In an April 1917 letter to his brother in law he wrote that he was considering taking the Canadian Northern Railway west so he could paint the Canadian Rockies in July and August 144 145 A Y Jackson suggested Thomson would have travelled even further north just as the other members of the Group of Seven eventually did 144 nbsp Petawawa Gorges Fall 1916 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Wild Geese Sketch for Chill November Fall 1916 Sketch Museum London London nbsp Woodland Waterfall Winter 1916 17 121 9 x 132 5 cm McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp The Pointers Winter 1916 17 101 x 114 6 cm Hart House University of Toronto nbsp Open Water Joe Creek Spring 1917 Sketch Thomson Collection Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Death edit Main article Death and legacy of Tom Thomson nbsp The Tom Thomson Memorial Cairn Canoe Lake Algonquin Park On July 8 1917 Thomson disappeared during a canoeing trip on Canoe Lake 146 His upturned canoe was spotted later in the afternoon and his body was discovered in the lake eight days later 146 147 It was noted that he had a four inch cut on his right temple and had bled from his right ear The cause of death was officially determined to be accidental drowning 146 148 149 The day after the body was discovered it was interred in Mowat Cemetery near Canoe Lake 146 150 note 11 Under the direction of Thomson s older brother George the body was exhumed two days later and re interred on July 21 in the family plot beside the Leith Presbyterian Church in what is now the Municipality of Meaford Ontario 151 152 153 In September 1917 J E H MacDonald and John William Beatty erected a memorial cairn at Hayhurst Point on Canoe Lake to honour Thomson where he died 151 154 155 There has been much speculation about the circumstances of Thomson s death including that he was murdered or committed suicide Though these ideas lack substance they have continued to persist in the popular culture 146 156 Andrew Hunter has pointed to Park ranger Mark Robinson as being largely responsible for the suggestion that there was more to his death than accidental drowning Hunter expands on this thought writing I am convinced that people s desire to believe the Thomson murder mystery soap opera is rooted in the firmly fixed idea that he was an expert woodsman intimate with nature Such figures aren t supposed to die by accident If they do it is like Grey Owl s being exposed as an Englishman 157 Art and technique edit nbsp Northern River Winter 1914 15 115 1 102 cm National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Artistic development edit Main article Artistic development of Tom Thomson Thomson was largely self taught His experiences as a graphic designer with Toronto s Grip Ltd honed his draughtsmanship 3 Although he began painting and drawing at an early age it was only in 1912 when he was well into his thirties that he began to paint seriously 57 58 His first trips to Algonquin Park inspired him to follow the lead of fellow artists in producing oil sketches of natural scenes on small rectangular panels for easy portability while travelling Between 1912 and his death in 1917 Thomson produced hundreds of these small sketches many of which are now considered works in their own right and are mostly found in the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg and the Tom Thomson Art Gallery in Owen Sound 158 Thomson produced nearly all of his works between 1912 and 1917 Most of his large canvases were completed in his most productive period from late 1916 to early 1917 158 The patronage of James MacCallum enabled Thomson s transition from graphic designer to professional painter 65 66 Although the Group of Seven was not founded until after his death his work was sympathetic to that of group members A Y Jackson Frederick Varley and Arthur Lismer These artists shared an appreciation for rugged unkempt natural scenery and all used broad brush strokes and a liberal application of paint to capture the beauty and colour of the Ontario landscape 159 160 Thomson s art also bears some stylistic resemblance to the work of European post impressionists such as Vincent van Gogh 161 Other key influences were the Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts movements of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries styles with which he became familiar while working in the graphic arts 162 nbsp Northern Lights Spring 1917 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Thomson s artwork is typically divided into two bodies the first are the small oil sketches on wood panels of which there are around 400 and the second is of around 50 larger works on canvas 158 The smaller sketches were typically done en plein air in the North primarily Algonquin Park in the spring summer and fall 163 Mark Robinson later recounted that Thomson usually had a particular motif he wanted to depict before going into nature to find a comparison 164 165 The larger canvases were instead completed over the winter in Thomson s studio an old utility shack with a wood burning stove on the grounds of the Studio Building an artist s enclave in Rosedale Toronto 28 166 167 About a dozen of the major canvases were derived directly from smaller sketches note 12 Paintings like Northern River Spring Ice The Jack Pine and The West Wind were only later expanded into larger oil paintings 158 Sketches from 1913 and earlier use a variety of supports including canvas laid down on paperboard canvas laid down on wood and commercial canvas board In 1914 he began to favour the larger birch wood panels used by A Y Jackson typically measuring around 21 6 26 7 cm 8 10 in From late 1914 on Thomson alternated between painting on these inexpensive pieces of wood some from crates bookbinder s board and other assorted sources and composite wood pulp boards 169 Although the sketches were produced quickly the canvases were developed over weeks or even months Compared to the panels they display an inherent formality 170 and lack much of the energy spontaneity and immediacy of the original sketches 168 The transition from small to large required a reinvention or elaboration of the original details by comparing sketches with their respective canvases one can see the changes Thomson made in colour detail and background textural patterns 170 171 Although few of the larger paintings were sold during his lifetime they formed the basis of posthumous exhibitions including one at Wembley in London in 1924 that eventually brought his work to international attention 172 173 174 Described as having an idiosyncratic palette Thomson had exceptional control of colour 175 He often mixed available pigments to create new unusual colours that along with his brushwork made his art instantly recognizable regardless of its subject 176 His painting style and the atmosphere colours and forms of his work influenced the work of his colleagues and friends especially Jackson Lismer MacDonald Harris and Carmichael 177 Series and themes edit Trees edit See also The Jack Pine and The West Wind painting nbsp The West Wind Winter 1916 17 120 7 137 9 cm Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Thomson s most famous paintings are his depictions of pine trees particularly The Jack Pine and The West Wind David Silcox has described these paintings as the visual equivalent of a national anthem for they have come to represent the spirit of the whole country notwithstanding the fact that vast tracts of Canada have no pine trees 178 and as so majestic and memorable that nearly everyone knows them 179 Arthur Lismer described them similarly saying that the tree in The West Wind was a symbol of the Canadian character unyielding to the wind and emblematic of steadfastness and resolution 180 Thomson had a great enthusiasm for trees and worked to capture their forms their surrounding locations and the effect of the seasons on them He normally depicted trees as amalgamated masses giving form structure and colour by dragging paint in bold strokes over an underlying tone 181 His favourite motif was of a slight hill next to a body of water 182 His enthusiasm is especially apparent in an anecdote from Ernest Freure who invited Thomson to camp on an island on Georgian Bay One day while we were together on my island I was talking to Tom about my plans for cleaning up the dead wood and trees and I said I was going to cut down all the trees but he said No don t do that they are beautiful 183 The theme of the single tree is common in Art Nouveau 184 while the motif of the lone heroic tree goes back even further to at least Caspar David Friedrich and early German Romanticism 185 Thomson may also have been influenced by the work of MacDonald while working at Grip Limited MacDonald in turn was influenced by the landscape art of John Constable whose work he likely saw while in England from 1903 to 1906 184 Constable s art influenced Thomson s as well something apparent when Constable s Stoke by Nayland c 1810 11 is compared with Thomson s Poplars by a Lake 186 Thomson s earlier paintings were closer to literal renderings of the trees in front of him and as he progressed the trees became more expressive as Thomson amplified their individual qualities 187 Byng Inlet Georgian Bay shows the broken high keyed colour that Thomson and his colleagues experimented with later in his career and is similar to Lismer s Sunglow While Lismer only applied the technique to the water Thomson applied it throughout the composition 188 According to MacCallum Thomson worked on Pine Island Georgian Bay over an extended period 188 He wrote that this painting had more emotion and feeling than any other of Thomson s canvases 188 In contrast MacDonald found it rather commonplace in color amp composition amp not representative of Thomson at his best 189 nbsp Byng Inlet Georgian Bay Winter 1914 1915 71 5 76 3 cm McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Pine Trees at Sunset Summer 1915 Sketch Private collection Toronto nbsp Pine Island Georgian Bay Winter 1914 16 153 2 x 127 7 cm National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp The Birch Grove Autumn Winter 1915 16 101 6 116 8 cm Art Gallery of Hamilton Hamilton nbsp Pine Cleft Rocks Spring 1916 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg Skies edit nbsp Sunset Summer 1915 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Thomson was preoccupied with capturing the sky especially near the end of his career from 1915 onward Paintings like Sunset which was painted at water level in a canoe illustrate his excited brushstrokes in capturing the lake s reflection 190 The painting was done over a grey green ground adding depth to both the light of the sky and the reflecting water 117 Paintings from 1913 and on consistently utilize the perspective of the canoe with a narrow foreground of water a distant shoreline and a dominating sky 191 192 The 1915 volcanic eruption of Lassen Peak in California provided dramatic sunrises and sunsets in the northern hemisphere for the year These skies provided artistic inspiration for Thomson and other artists in the same way that the eruption of Krakatoa in the previous century had inspired Edvard Munch 192 193 Sky effects were one of Thomson s main interests for the entire year indicated by his heightened use of colour 117 Harold Town has compared Sky The Light That Never Was to the works of J M W Turner In particular he notes the way that the sky creeps into the landscape big rhythms supplanting small movement The horizon disappears and pure movement is left behind 194 nbsp Sky The Light that Never Was Summer 1913 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Sketch for Morning Cloud Fall 1913 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Wild Cherries Spring Spring 1915 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Summer Day Summer 1915 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Round Lake Mud Bay Fall 1915 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Nocturnes edit nbsp Northern Lights Spring 1917 Sketch Thomson Collection Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Thomson produced more nocturnes than the rest of the Group of Seven combined roughly two dozen 195 196 MacCallum recalled that Thomson often spent his nights lying in his canoe in the middle of the lake stargazing and avoiding mosquitoes 195 197 Besides capturing the nighttime sky he also captured silhouettes of spruce and birch trees lumber camps two moose emerging from water and the northern lights painting five different sketches of the aurora 196 198 Mark Robinson recounted that Thomson stood and contemplated the aurora for an extended period of time before going back into his cabin to paint by lamplight 199 He sometimes completed nocturnes this way going back and forth between painting indoors and looking at the subject outside until he completed the sketch 200 Other times given the difficulty of painting by moonlight many of the nocturnes were painted entirely from memory MacCallum confirmed that the sketch Moose at Night was completed in this way writing on the back Winter 1916 at studio 142 implying it was probably painted in Toronto 201 His moonlight paintings use a dreamy pale toned style applying the techniques of Impressionism in his observations of light reflection and atmosphere 200 nbsp Moonlight Winter 1913 14 52 9 77 1 cm National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp Moonlight Fall 1915 Sketch Private collection Toronto nbsp Silver Birches Winter 1915 16 40 9 56 0 cm McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Moose at Night Winter 1916 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa Flowers edit nbsp Wildflowers Summer 1915 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg As was typical for painters of the early twentieth century Thomson produced still lifes of flowers 202 all of which appear in the form of sketches His love of flowers may have developed from his father who as a neighbour noted had a permanent half acre of a really good garden which was always worth going to see 203 Thomson s time spent as a child collecting samples with his naturalist relative William Brodie may have similarly influenced him though his interest in painting flowers seems to have been more focused on patterning and decoration than on the horticultural specifics of the subject 204 These paintings especially Marguerites Wood Lilies and Vetch and Wildflowers are particularly powerful examples of the genre 202 J E H MacDonald himself deeply invested in floral imagery was so captured by Marguerites Wood Lilies and Vetch that he kept it for himself writing Not For Sale on the back 205 206 Thomson s work is contrasted from MacDonald s by what Joan Murray calls its elegant slightly funky form and throwaway spontaneity 207 Lawren Harris instead noted Wildflowers as a favourite writing 1st class on the verso The colour of the sketch is less brilliant but has superb brushwork and is well coordinated setting blues against yellows and reds against whites 208 Responding to his subject with improvization 209 every painting is different in its colour scheme and arrangement 210 In all the sketches he redirected emphasis from the delicacy of the flowers towards simple broad strokes of colour something Harold Town thought imparted a toughness of design sometimes missing in his harder themes of rock and bracken 211 In Water Flowers particularly the shapes are handled so summarily that the focus moves entirely to the colour of the flowers 212 This combined with the black background produces a more abstract effect 213 214 The black backdrop also causes the colours of the flowers to appear more vivid 206 215 nbsp Canadian Wildflower Summer 1915 Sketch National Gallery on Canada Ottawa nbsp Marguerites Wood Lilies and Vetch Summer 1915 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Water Flowers Summer 1915 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Wild Flowers Summer 1915 Sketch Tom Thomson Art Gallery Owen Sound nbsp Moccasin Flower Orchids Algonquin Park Spring 1916 Sketch Private collection Industry in nature edit See also Drowned Land nbsp Lumber Dam Summer 1915 Sketch National Gallery of Canada OttawaDuring Thomson s time in Algonquin Park logging and the lumber industry were a constant presence 216 note 13 He often painted the machinery left behind by lumber companies Lismer MacDonald and he were especially drawn to the subject A Y Jackson wrote It was a ragged country a lumber company had slashed it up and fire had run through it Thomson was much indebted to the lumber companies They had built dams and log chutes and had made clearings for camps But for them the landscape would have been just bush difficult to travel in and with nothing to paint 217 Around 1916 Thomson followed the drive of logs down the Madawaska River painting the subject in The Drive MacDonald similarly expressed the drive in his 1915 painting Logs on the Gatineau 218 Besides the dams pointer and alligator boats and log drives that appear in Thomson s work other less obvious depictions of the lumber industry are evident For example areas cleared out due to logging appear in early sketches such as Canoe Lake 1913 and Red Forest The painting Drowned Land similarly displays the damage caused by logging operations and flooding due to damming 47 As well the white birches present in many paintings only thrive in sunny open areas whose previous tree cover had been removed 219 meaning that logging was in some way necessary for them to flourish 216 Thomson s and the Group of Seven s work reflects the typical Canadian attitudes of the time namely that the available natural resources were meant to be exploited 73 220 note 14 Harold Town has argued that while Thomson was not directly critical of industry mining and logging he did not glorify industry in the bush 223 Paul Walton of McMaster University noted that Thomson occasionally referenced both the lumbering and tourism practices of Algonquin Park and did not entirely ignore the damaging effects of logging on the environment but for the most part he concentrated on newly opened vista of sky and water or on finding decorative patterns of colour form and texture in the tangle of underbrush smaller trees and bared rock the bush that was often the remnant of the original forest 224 Jackson first noted these distinctions in Thomson s works from those showing a low shore line and a big sky and those finding happy color motives amid the tangle and confusion of his waste of rock and swamp 225 nbsp Drowned Land Fall 1912 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Logging Spring Algonquin Park Spring 1916 Sketch Private collection nbsp Bateaux Summer 1916 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp The Drive Winter 1916 17 120 137 5 cm University of Guelph Collection Art Gallery of Guelph Guelph People edit nbsp The Poacher Spring 1916 Sketch Thomson Collection Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto Thomson like most of the members of the Group of Seven rarely painted people 226 227 note 15 When he did the human subject was usually someone close to him personally such as the depiction of Shannon Fraser In the Sugar Bush Harold Town observed that both Thomson and Canadian artist David Milne shared in common a similar inability to draw the human figure 229 something professor John Wadland thought was embarrassingly evident in several of Thomson s portraits 229 Thomson s most successful attempts at capturing people typically feature figures far off in the distance allowing them to blend in to the scene This is apparent in paintings like Little Cauchon Lake Bateaux The Drive The Pointers and Tea Lake Dam 226 Town described paintings like Man with Axe Lowery Dixon Splitting Wood as stiff yet still held together in a cohesive crudity He described Figure of a Lady Laura differently interpreting it as a tender work well designed and plainly expressed this loving picture is so secure in intention that it survives indeed triumphs over the severe cracking of the paint 228 The figure in The Poacher is recorded deliberately including his hat hunting vest and blue shirt The hot coal grill in front of him is drying his poach likely venison 230 nbsp Man with Axe Lowery Dickson Splitting Wood Fall 1915 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp Figure of a Lady Laura Fall 1915 Sketch McMichael Canadian Art Collection Kleinburg nbsp Little Cauchon Lake Spring 1916 Sketch National Gallery of Canada Ottawa nbsp In the Sugar Bush Shannon Fraser Spring 1916 Sketch Art Gallery of Ontario Toronto nbsp The Fisherman Winter 1916 17 51 3 x 56 5 cm Art Gallery of Alberta EdmontonLegacy and influence editMain article Death and legacy of Tom Thomson nbsp Thomson fishing at Tea Lake Dam in Algonquin Park c 1915 Since his death Thomson s work has grown in value and popularity Group of Seven member Arthur Lismer wrote that he is the manifestation of the Canadian character 231 Another contemporaneous Canadian painter David Milne wrote to National Gallery of Canada Director H O McCurry in 1930 Your Canadian art apparently for now at least went down in Canoe Lake Tom Thomson still stands as the Canadian painter harsh brilliant brittle uncouth not only most Canadian but most creative How the few things of his stick in one s mind 232 Murray notes that Thomson s influence can be seen in the work of later Canadian artists including Rae Johnson Joyce Wieland Gordon Rayner and Michael Snow 233 Sherrill Grace wrote that for Roy Kiyooka and Dennis Lee he is a haunting presence and embodies the Canadian artistic identity 234 As of 2015 the highest price achieved by a Thomson sketch was Early Spring Canoe Lake which sold in 2009 for CAD 2 749 500 Few major canvases remain in private collections making the record unlikely to be broken 235 One example of the demand his work has achieved is the previously lost Sketch for Lake in Algonquin Park discovered in an Edmonton basement in 2018 it sold for nearly half a million dollars at a Toronto auction 236 237 The increased value of his work has led to the discovery of numerous forgeries on the market 238 such as those produced by convicted forger William Firth MacGregor 239 note 16 Art historian Joan Murray assembled a catalogue raisonne of Thomson works until her retirement in 2016 241 In 1967 the Tom Thomson Art Gallery opened in Owen Sound 242 In 1968 Thomson s shack from behind the Studio Building was moved to the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg 243 Many of his works are also on display at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa the Art Gallery of Ontario and the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg Ontario 158 In 2004 another historical marker honouring Thomson was moved from its previous location near the centre of Leith to the graveyard in which he is now buried The gravesite has become a popular spot for visitors to the area with many fans of his work leaving pennies or art supplies behind as tribute 244 Though best known for his painting Thomson is often mythologized as a veritable outdoorsman James MacCallum contributed stories to this image He has often been remembered as an expert canoeist though David Silcox has argued that this image is romanticized 245 In the case of fishing he was no doubt proficient He had a deep love of fishing for his entire life so much so that his reputation through Algonquin Park was equally divided between art and angling Most who visited the Park were led by hired guides but he travelled through the park on his own Many of his fishing locations appear in his work 246 See also editList of unsolved deathsReferences editFootnotes edit Thomson may have briefly studied under British artist William Cruikshank around 1905 1 It is also possible that he read John Ruskin s 1857 handbook The Elements of Drawing while learning to draw 2 Besides these instances it is clear that he had no other art instruction 3 Refer to Death and legacy of Tom Thomson An untainted artist Though he died before the Group of Seven s founding in 1920 Thomson s connection to the artists and the art they created is unquestionable 4 In his 1964 book The Story of the Group of Seven Lawren Harris wrote I have in my story of the Group included Tom Thomson as a working member although the name of the group did not originate until after his death Tom Thomson was nevertheless as vital to the movement as much a part of its formation and development as any other member 5 Sketch indicates that the work is a smaller oil work generally on wood panel The dimensions are often close to 21 6 26 7 cm 8 10 in but sometimes as small as 12 8 18 2 cm 51 16 x 73 16 in Sources disagree on the timing of Thomson s hiring Grip supervisor Albert H Robson wrote in 1932 that he was hired in 1907 30 but by 1937 Robson was instead writing that he was hired in 1908 31 Robert Stacey has suggested December 1908 19 David Silcox the beginning of 1909 3 Art historians Joan Murray and Gregory Humeniuk each suggest December 1908 or January 1909 32 33 Curator Charles Hill noted that Thomson is listed in the Toronto City Directory between 1906 and 1909 as working with Legg Bros Photo Engravers in 1910 merely as an artist living at 99 Gerrard E and in 1911 as at Grip Ltd Hill supposes that Thomson therefore likely began at Grip in late 1909 after the information for the 1910 directory was collected 34 Thomson wrote in a letter to his friend M J John McRuer We started in at Bisco and took a long trip on the lakes around there going up the Spanish River and over into the Mississauga Mississagi water we got a great many good snapshots of game mostly moose and some sketches but we had a dump in the forty mile rapids which is near the end of our trip and lost most of our stuff we only saved 2 rolls of film out of about 14 dozen Outside of that we had a peach of a time as the Mississauga is considered the finest canoe trip in the world 60 For more regarding Thomson s possible romantic relationship with Trainor refer to MacGregor 2010 Unsigned paintings exhibited during Thomson s lifetime include Northern Lake 1912 13 Morning Cloud Moonlight 1913 14 Split Rock Georgian Bay Canadian Wildflowers Moonlight 1915 and October 82 In his 1959 piece My Memories of Tom Thomson Thoreau MacDonald cited November 1915 as when Thomson moved into the shack behind the Studio Building 116 Most sources agree with this including Charles Hill 117 William Little 114 and Addison amp Harwood 113 David Silcox has written that the move happened in either late 1914 28 or early 1915 28 118 MacDonald s measurements were 44 37 but the panels installed were 27 37 The panels Thomson produced were 47 38 123 124 In the Northland was originally titled The Birches 119 All of Thomson s canvases from the winter of 1916 17 were titled after his death 126 Mowat Cemetery was located at 45 33 47 N 78 43 42 W 45 56306 N 78 72833 W 45 56306 78 72833 Mowat Cemetery Silcox amp Town report that barely a dozen of the canvases were developed directly from the sketches 158 while Joan Murray puts the number at eight 168 For more regarding the industrialization of Algonquin Park refer to Edwards 1976 Lloyd 2000 and McKenna 1976 An article in the Owen Sound Sun describing Thomson s 1912 visit to the Mississagi Forest Reserve wrote that technology gave value to the landscape 221 and placed emphasis on the mineral forest water power and fish and game resources rather than on any scenic beauty the land possessed 222 Notable exceptions are Frederick Varley and Frank Johnston Varley s main interest being people faces and figures 227 228 At the beginning of his career Lawren Harris captured people in nearly all of his depictions of Toronto and did several portraits but later moved on to only depicting landscapes Edwin Holgate painted the female figure and completed several nudes 227 Murray identifies two Thomson forgeries in her 1994 book Tom Thomson The Last Spring each of which feature ill defined landscapes half hidden by the smeary paint handling and heavy impasto 240 In 2021 22 the Art Gallery of Hamilton and Agnes Etherington Art Centre in Kingston Ontario held an exhibition comparing known Thomson forgeries to authentic works alongside paintings with uncertain origins 241 Citations edit a b Murray 1986 p 6 Hill 2002 pp 113 113n18 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 43 Murray 1999 p 2 a b c d e f Silcox 2015 p 9 Waddington amp Waddington 2016 p 29 Harris 1964 p 7 Klages 2016 p 10 a b c Silcox 2015 p 4 a b c d e f Silcox amp Town 2017 p 41 MacDonald 1917 p 47 quoted in Hill 2002 p 113 Murray 1998 pp 14 15 22 25 Silcox 2015 p 57 Murray 1999 p 5 Murray 1999 pp 6 7 Wadland 2002 p 93 a b c d e f g Hill 2002 p 113 a b Silcox amp Town 2017 p 42 a b Silcox 2015 p 6 a b Silcox 2006 pp 107 08 a b c d e Stacey 2002 p 50 Murray 1971 p 9 a b c d e Silcox 2015 p 7 Stacey 2002 pp 50 51 Stacey 2002 p 51 a b Stacey 2002 p 52 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 43 Wadland 2002 p 92 a b Silcox 2015 p 7 a b c d e f Silcox 2006 p 127 Murray 1999 p viii Robson 1932 p 138 quoted in Hill 2002 p 113n16 Robson 1937 p 5 quoted in Hill 2002 p 113n16 a b Murray 2002b p 310 Humeniuk 2020 p 315 Hill 2002 p 113n16 King 2010 p 14 a b Robson 1932 p 138 quoted in Stacey 2002 p 53 Robson 1937 p 6 quoted in Hill 2002 p 114 Hill 2002 p 115 Stacey 1998 p 96n9 a b Stacey 2002 p 58 a b Hill 2002 p 114 a b Murray 2004 p 16 a b c d Hill 2002 p 117 Silcox 2015 p 9n2 Reid 1970 p 28 Stacey amp Bishop 1996 p 118 a b c d Wadland 2002 p 95 a b c d e f Hill 2002 p 118 a b Wadland 2002 p 94 Hunter 2002 p 25 Klages 2016 p 21 Silcox 2006 p 20 Silcox 2015 p 10 Stacey 2002 p 57 Addison amp Harwood 1969 p 88n4 Addison 1974 p 75 Murray 2011 p 3 a b Hunter 2002 pp 25 26 a b Hunter 2002 p 26 a b c Hunter 2002 p 27 a b c Silcox 2015 p 10 a b c Silcox 2006 p 23 a b c d Hill 2002 p 119 Murray 2002a p 297 Klages 2016 p 23 Stacey 2002 pp 57 58 Rossell c 1951 p 3 quoted in Stacey 2002 p 58 a b c Hill 2002 p 122 a b Silcox 2006 p 21 a b c Silcox 2015 p 11 MacCallum 1918 p 376 Murray 2002a p 298 Murray 2002b p 312 Addison 1974 p 18 Little 1970 p 13 a b Hill 2002 p 121 a b Silcox 2015 p 58 Addison 1974 pp 25 26 Silcox 2015 p 12 King 2010 pp 169 70 Hill 2002 p 120 Silcox 2015 p 12 Stacey 2002 p 60 Jackson 1958 p 31 Hill 2002 pp 117 117n36 Hill 2002 p 117n35 a b c Silcox 2015 p 13 Jackson 1958 p 27 Jackson 1933 p 138 quoted in Roza 1997 pp 20 21 Murray 2006 p 17 a b c Hill 2002 p 128 King 2010 pp 154 59 Harris 1964 quoted in Silcox 2006 p 127 Hill 2002 p 124 a b Wadland 2002 p 105 a b c Hill 2002 p 125 a b c Wadland 2002 p 105n70 Murray 2002b p 313 Addison amp Harwood 1969 p 32 Murray 2004 p 108 Hill 2002 pp 125 26 a b c d Hill 2002 p 126 Waddington amp Waddington 2016 p 131 Jackson 1958 pp 53 54 a b c Hunter 2002 p 40 Davies 1930 pp 29 31 quoted in Hunter 2002 p 40 Thomson 1956 pp 21 24 quoted in Hunter 2002 p 40 Colgate 1946 p 15 quoted in Hunter 2002 p 40 Murray 2002a p 300 01 Hunter 2002 p 41 Silcox 2015 p 14 Hill 2002 p 131 Hill 2002 p 133 Wadland 2002 p 102 Ghent 1949 quoted in Hill 2002 p 131 Addison amp Harwood 1969 p 46 a b Addison amp Harwood 1969 p 84 a b Little 1970 p 179 Silcox 2015 p 13 Hill 2002 p 132n119 a b c Hill 2002 p 132 Silcox 2015 pp 12 13 a b c Hill 2002 p 136 Landry 1990 p 26 Reid 1970 p 93 Stacey amp Bishop 1996 p 119 Hill 2002 p 136n134 Reid 1969 pp 49 69 Fairbairn 1916 quoted in Hill 2002 p 136 a b c Hill 2002 p 139 Hill 2002 pp 136 37 Kerr 1916 p 13 quoted in Hill 2002 p 137 a b c Hill 2002 p 137 a b Silcox 2015 p 16 Reid 1970 p 126 Hill 2002 pp 137 38 a b Hill 2002 p 138 Murray 2002a pp 302 03 Silcox 2006 p 20 Murray 2002a pp 303 04 Silcox 2015 p 17 MacCallum 1918 pp 375 85 quoted in Hill 2002 p 139 Fairley 1920 p 246 quoted in Hill 2002 p 139 Forsey 1975 p 188 quoted in Hill 2002 p 139 Hill 2002 pp 140 140n167 a b Hill 2002 p 141 Silcox 2015 p 18 a b Murray 1999 p 122 Murray 2002a pp 304 05 a b c d e Silcox amp Town 2017 p 49 Robinson 1917 quoted in Hill 2002 p 142 333n182 Howland 1917 Ranney 1931 Fraser 1917 quoted in Hill 2002 p 142 333n184 a b Hill 2002 p 142 Silcox amp Town 2017 pp 49 50 Historic Leith Church www meaford ca Retrieved January 16 2018 Silcox 2006 p 213 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 240 Klages 2016 Hunter 2002 p 39 a b c d e f Silcox amp Town 2017 p 181 Silcox 2015 p 40 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 140 Silcox 2015 pp 30 48 Hill 2002 p 113 Murray 1999 p 7 Silcox 2015 pp 22 47 68 71 Silcox amp Town 2017 pp 94 210 Silcox 2015 pp 59 60 Davies 1935 pp 108 09 quoted in Hill 2002 pp 133 34 Little 1970 pp 187 89 Silcox amp Town 2017 pp 181 85 Brown 1998 pp 151 158 a b Murray 2011 p 6 Webster Cook amp Ruggles 2002 pp 146 47 a b Silcox amp Town 2017 pp 181 82 Murray 2006 p 92 Jessup 2007 p 188 Dawn 2007 p 193 Dejardin 2011 Silcox 2015 pp 72 73 Silcox 2015 p 73 Silcox 2006 p 212 Thomson s sketches directly inspired and informed the work of his colleagues particularly Jackson Lismer MacDonald and Lawren Harris Murray 1990 p 155 Thomson s way of painting strongly influenced Carmichael Silcox 2006 p 50 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 19 Lismer 1934 pp 163 64 quoted in Murray 1999 p 114 MacCallum 1918 pp 379 80 Murray 1999 p 8 Murray 1999 p v a b Murray 1999 p 7 Halkes 2003 p 99 Silcox 2015 p 69 Murray 1999 p 15 a b c Hill 2002 p 129 Hill 2002 p 129n106 Silcox 2015 p 27 Silcox 2006 p 211 a b Silcox 2015 p 28 King 2010 pp 182 83 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 58 a b Silcox 2015 p 38 a b Silcox amp Town 2017 p 221 Silcox amp Town 2017 pp 221 236 Silcox 2015 pp 37 38 Little 1970 p 198 a b Murray 2011 p 70 Hill 2002 p 134n127 a b Silcox 2006 p 75 Murray 1986 p 41 King 2010 p 182 Murray 2002c pp 12 102 a b Murray 2011 p 50 Murray 2002c p 12 Murray 2011 p 52 Murray 2002c p 100 Murray 2002c p 98 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 96 Murray 1986 p 58 Murray 2002c pp 14 106 Murray 2011 p 54 Murray 2002c pp 13 98 a b Hunter 2002 p 30 Jackson 1958 quoted in Sloan 2010 pp 70 71 amp Silcox 2006 p 211 Silcox 2006 pp 211 255 56 Strickland 1996 p 19 quoted in Hunter 2002 p 30 Silcox 2006 pp 210 11 Nelles 1974 p 51 quoted in Walton 2007 p 142 142n9 Murray 1971 p 23 quoted in Walton 2007 p 142 142n10 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 72 Walton 2007 p 143 Jackson 1919 p 2 quoted in Walton 2007 p 143n19 a b Hunter 2002 p 32 a b c Silcox 2006 p 76 a b Silcox amp Town 2017 p 124 a b Wadland 2002 p 99 Murray 2011 p 96 Lismer 1934 pp 163 64 quoted in Hunter 2002 p 35 Dejardin 2018 pp 17 194 Murray 1998 pp 98 101 quoted in Grace 2004a p 81 Grace 2004a p 96 Silcox 2015 p 66 Vikander 2018 The Canadian Press 2018 Silcox amp Town 2017 p 182 Silcox 2015 p 74 Dellandrea 2017 Murray 1994a pp 3 4 a b Lederman 2021 Tom Thomson Art Gallery City of Owen Sound June 2018 Dexter 1968 Leith United Church Heritage Meaford www heritagemeaford com Retrieved January 16 2018 Silcox amp Town 2017 pp 236 37 Hunter 2002 pp 28 29 Sources edit Books Addison Ottelyn Harwood Elizabeth 1969 Tom Thomson The Algonquin Years Toronto Ryerson Press Addison Ottelyn 1974 Early Days in Algonquin Park Toronto McGraw Hill Ryerson ISBN 978 0 07077 786 6 Brown W Douglas 1998 The Arts and Crafts Architecture of Eden Smith In Latham David ed Scarlet Hunters Pre Raphaelitism in Canada Toronto Archives of Canadian Art ISBN 978 1 89423 400 9 Colgate William ed 1946 Two Letters of Tom Thomson 1915 and 1916 Weston Old Rectory Press Davies Blodwen 1930 Paddle amp Palette The Story of Tom Thomson Toronto Ryerson Press 1935 A Study of Tom Thomson The Story of a Man Who Looked for Beauty and for Truth in the Wilderness Toronto Discuss Press Dawn Leslie 2007 The Britishness of Canadian Art 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 77353 244 1 Dejardin Ian A C 2011 Painting Canada Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven London Dulwich Picture Gallery ISBN 978 0 85667 686 4 2018 Dazzle and Kick The Life of David Milne In Milroy Sarah Dejardin Ian A C eds David Milne Modern Painting London Philip Wilson Publishers pp 17 28 ISBN 978 1 78130 061 9 Edwards Ron 1976 Petawawa River Survey Sites A History Algonquin Region Ministry of Natural Resources Forsey William C 1975 The Ontario Community Collects A Survey of Canadian Painting from 1766 to the Present Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario ISBN 9780919876125 Grace Sherrill 2004a Inventing Tom Thomson From Biographical Fictions to Fictional Autobiographies and Reproductions Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 77352 752 2 Harris Lawren S 1964 The Story of the Group of Seven Toronto Rous and Mann Press Hill Charles 2002 Tom Thomson Painter In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 111 43 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Humeniuk Gregory 2020 Chronology In Dejardin Ian A C Milroy Sarah eds A Like Vision The Group of Seven amp Tom Thomson Fredericton Goose Lane Editions pp 314 21 ISBN 978 1 77310 205 4 Hunter Andrew 2002 Mapping Tom In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 19 46 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Jackson A Y 1958 A Painter s Country Toronto Clarke Irwin Jessup Lynda 2007 Art for a Nation 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 77353 244 1 King Ross 2010 Defiant Spirits The Modernist Revolution of the Group of Seven Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 978 1 55365 807 8 Klages Gregory 2016 The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson Separating Fact from Fiction Toronto Dundurn ISBN 978 1 45973 196 7 Landry Pierre 1990 The MacCallum Jackman Cottage Mural Paintings Ottawa National Gallery of Canada ISBN 978 0 888 84598 6 Little William T 1970 The Tom Thomson Mystery Toronto McGraw Hill Ryerson Ltd Lloyd Donald L 2000 Canoeing Algonquin Park Toronto Donald L Lloyd ISBN 978 0 96865 560 3 MacGregor Roy 2010 Northern Light The Enduring Mystery of Tom Thomson and the Woman Who Loved Him Toronto Random House Canada ISBN 978 0 30735 739 7 McKenna Ed 1976 A Systematic Approach to the History of the Forest Industry in Algonquin Park 1835 1913 with an Evaluation of Algonquin Park s Historical Resources and an Assessment of Algonquin Park s Historical Zone System Algonquin Region Ministry of Natural Resources Murray Joan 1971 The Art of Tom Thomson Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario 1986 The Best of Tom Thomson Edmonton Hurtig ISBN 978 0 88830 299 1 1994a Tom Thomson The Last Spring Toronto Dundurn ISBN 978 1 55002 218 6 1998 Tom Thomson Design for A Canadian Hero Toronto Dundurn ISBN 978 1 55002 315 2 1999 Tom Thomson Trees Toronto McArthur amp Co ISBN 978 1 55278 092 3 2002a Tom Thomson s Letters In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 297 306 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 2002b Chronology In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 307 17 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 2002c Flowers J E H MacDonald Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven Toronto McArthur amp Co ISBN 978 1 55278 326 9 2004 Water Lawren Harris and the Group of Seven Toronto McArthur amp Co pp 108 15 ISBN 978 1 55278 457 0 2006 Rocks Franklin Carmichael Arthur Lismer and the Group of Seven Toronto McArthur amp Co pp 92 97 ISBN 978 1 55278 616 1 2011 A Treasury of Tom Thomson Toronto Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 978 1 55365 886 3 Nelles H V 1974 The Politics of Development Forests Mines and Hydro Electric Power in Ontario 1849 1941 Toronto a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Reid Dennis 1969 The MacCallum Bequest Ottawa National Gallery of Canada 1970 The Group of Seven Ottawa The National Gallery of Canada Robson Albert H 1932 Canadian Landscape Painters Toronto Ryerson Press 1937 Tom Thomson Painter of Our North Country 1877 1917 Toronto Ryerson Press 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 Richmond Hill Firefly Books ISBN 978 1 55407 154 8 2015 Tom Thomson Life and Work Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 48710 075 9 Town Harold 2017 Tom Thomson The Silence and the Storm Revised Expanded ed Toronto McClelland and Stewart ISBN 978 1 44344 234 3 Sloan Johanne 2010 Joyce Wieland s the Far Shore Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 44261 060 6 Stacey Robert Bishop Hunter 1996 J E H MacDonald Designer An Anthology of Graphic Design Illustration and Lettering Ottawa Archives of Canadian Art Carleton University Press ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Stacey Robert 1998 Making Us See the Light Franklin Brownell s Middle Passage North by South The Art of Peleg Franklin Brownell 1857 1946 Ottawa Ottawa Art Gallery ISBN 978 1 89510 847 7 2002 Tom Thomson as Applied Artist In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 47 63 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Strickland Dan 1996 Trees of Algonquin Provincial Park Toronto Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources ISBN 978 1 89570 920 9 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 Wadland John 2002 Tom Thomson s Places In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 85 109 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Walton Paul H 2007 The Group of Seven and Northern Development 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 77353 244 1 Webster Cook Sandra Ruggles Anne 2002 Technical Studies on Thomson s Materials and Working Methods In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 145 51 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Articles Canadian Press The May 30 2018 Tom Thomson sketch discovered in Edmonton basement sells for 481K at auction Toronto Star Retrieved August 19 2018 Dellandrea Jon S July August 2017 Brush with Infamy Literary Review of Canada Vol 26 no 6 Retrieved August 8 2018 Dexter Gail June 1 1968 Tom Thomson s dollar a month shack becomes a Group of Seven shrine Toronto Star Fairbairn Margaret March 11 1916 Some Pictures at the Art Gallery Toronto Daily Star Fairley Barker March 1920 Tom Thomson and Others The Rebel 3 6 244 48 Ghent Percy November 8 1949 Tom Thomson at Island Camp Round Lake November 1915 Toronto Telegram Halkes Petra Summer 2003 Richard Gorman Canadian Art 20 2 99 100 Jackson A Y 1919 Foreword Catalogue of an Exhibition of Paintings by the Late Tom Thomson March 1 to March 21 1919 By Arts Club of Montreal 1933 J E H MacDonald The Canadian Forum 13 136 38 Kerr Estelle M March 25 1916 At the Sign of the Maple Canadian Courier Vol 19 no 17 Lederman Marsha December 23 2021 Tom Thomson art exhibition shines spotlight on issues of authenticity The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on January 2 2022 Lismer Arthur January 1934 The West Wind McMaster Monthly 43 4 163 64 MacCallum James March 31 1918 Tom Thomson Painter of the North Canadian Magazine pp 375 85 MacDonald J E H November 1917 A Landmark of Canadian Art The Rebel 2 2 45 50 Murray Joan May 1990 Carmichael s Triumph Journal of Canadian Studies 25 2 155 59 doi 10 3138 jcs 25 2 155 S2CID 151323505 Thomson Margaret Spring 1956 Margaret Thomson Reminiscences of Tom Thomson New Frontiers 5 1 21 24 Vikander Tessa May 9 2018 Tom Thomson sketch heads to Toronto auction block after languishing in Edmonton basement Toronto Star Retrieved August 19 2018 Archives and letters Fraser J S Telegram to John Thomson July 16 1917 Telegram Tom Thomson Collection File 1 3 ID MG30 D284 Ottawa Library and Archives Canada Howland Gordon W Copy of G W Howland s affidavit Originals withdrawn from circulation Copies available on microfilm C 4579 July 17 1917 11 Fonds Blodwen Davies fond ID MG30 D38 Ottawa Library and Archives Canada Ranney A E Letter to Blodwen Davies Original withdrawn from circulation Copies available on microfilm C 4579 May 7 1931 11 Fonds Blodwen Davies fond ID MG30 D38 Ottawa Library and Archives Canada Rossell Leonard Reminiscences of Grip Members of the Group of Seven and Tom Thomson c 1951 Tom Thomson Collection File T485 R82 ID MG30 D284 Ottawa Library and Archives Canada Robinson Mark Mark Robinson s Daily journal July 16 18 1917 Journal entry Addison family Fonds Addison family fonds ID 97 011 Peterborough Trent University Archives Further reading editBooks and catalogues Boulet Roger 1982 The Canadian Earth and Tom Thomson Cerebrus Publishing ISBN 978 0 13112 953 5 Hubbard R H 1962 Tom Thomson Toronto Society for Art Publications McClelland and Stewart Jackson A Y 1935 Foreword A Study of Tom Thomson The Story of a Man Who Looked for Beauty and for Truth in the Wilderness By Davies Blodwen Toronto Discus Press Littlefield Angie 2017 Tom Thomson s Fine Kettle of Friends Biography History Art and Food Toronto Marangi Editions ISBN 978 0 99583 180 3 MacCallum J M 1937 Tom Thomson Painter of the North Toronto Mellors Gallery MacGregor Roy 1980 Shorelines a Novel Toronto McClelland and Stewart ISBN 978 0 77105 459 4 Millard Laura 1998 Algonquin Memories Tom Thomson in Algonquin Park Owen Sound Thompson Books Milroy Sarah Dejardin Ian A C 2023 Tom Thomson North Star Fredericton Goose Lane Editions with McMichael Canadian Art Collection ISBN 978 1 77310 320 4 Murray Joan 1994b Northern Lights Masterpieces of Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven Toronto Key Porter ISBN 978 0 88665 347 7 1996 Tom Thomson A Sketchbook Toronto Golden Press Northway Mary L Edmison J Alex Ebbs J Harry Ebbs John W 1970a Nominigan A Casual History Toronto a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Northway Mary L 1970b Nominigan The Early Years Toronto University of Toronto Press Poling Jim 2003 Tom Thomson The Life and Mysterious Death of the Famous Canadian Painter Altitude Publishing ISBN 978 1 55153 950 8 Reid Dennis 1975 Tom Thomson The Jack Pine Masterpieces in the National Gallery of Canada Vol 5 Ottawa National Gallery of Canada 2002 Tom Thomson and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Toronto In Reid Dennis ed Tom Thomson Toronto Ottawa Art Gallery of Ontario National Gallery of Canada pp 65 83 ISBN 978 1 55365 493 3 Saunders A 1947 Algonquin Story Toronto Department of Lands and Forests Silcox David 2002 Tom Thomson An Introduction to His Life and Art Firefly Books ISBN 978 1 55297 682 1 Stanners Sarah 2017 Passion Over Reason Tom Thomson amp Joyce Wieland Kleinburg McMichael Canadian Art Collection ISBN 978 1 48680 480 1 Taylor Geoff 2017 Tom Thomson s Last Bonfire Burnstown Publishing House ISBN 978 1 77257 159 2 Town Harold 1965 The Pathfinder In Massey Vincent ed Great Canadians Canadian Centennial Library Toronto McClelland and Stewart Wadland John 1978 Ernest Thompson Seton Man in Nature and the Progressive Era 1880 1915 New York Arno ISBN 978 0 40510 736 8 Zeller Suzanne 1994 William Brodie Dictionary of Canadian Biography 1901 1910 Vol 13 University of Toronto Press Toronto pp 112 14 ISBN 978 0 80203 998 9 Journal articles Bordo Jonathan 1992 93 Jack Pine Wilderness Sublime or the Erasure of the Aboriginal Presence from the Canadian Landscape Journal of Canadian Studies 27 4 98 128 doi 10 3138 jcs 27 4 98 S2CID 141350945 Buchanan Donald W August 1946 Tom Thomson Painter of the True North Canadian Geographic Journal 33 2 98 100 Cameron Ross D 1999 Tom Thomson Antimodernism and the Ideal of Manhood Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 10 185 doi 10 7202 030513ar Comfort C Spring 1951 Georgian Bay Legacy Canadian Art 8 3 106 09 Corbeil Marie Claude Moffatt Elizabeth A Sirois P Jane Legate Kris M 2000 The Materials and Techniques of Tom Thomson Journal of the Canadian Association for Conservation 25 3 10 Jessup Lynda Spring 2002 The Group of Seven and the Tourist Landscape in Western Canada or the More Things Change Journal of Canadian Studies 37 144 79 doi 10 3138 jcs 37 1 144 S2CID 141215113 Lismer Arthur 1947 Tom Thomson 1877 1917 A Tribute to a Canadian Painter Canadian Art 5 2 59 62 Little R P 1955 Some Recollections of Tom Thomson and Canoe Lake Culture 16 200 08 Machardy Carolyn 1999 An Inquiry into the Success of Tom Thomson s The West Wind University of Toronto Quarterly 68 3 768 89 doi 10 3138 utq 68 3 768 S2CID 161625867 Mortimer Lamb Harold March 29 1919 Letter to the editor with attached draft article Studio Magazine August 1919 Studio Talk Tom Thomson The Studio 77 317 119 26 Murray Joan August 1991 The World of Tom Thomson Journal of Canadian Studies 26 3 5 51 doi 10 3138 jcs 26 3 5 S2CID 151998513 Pringle Gertrude April 10 1926 Tom Thomson The Man Painter of the Wilds Was a Very Unique Individuality Saturday Night 41 21 5 Reid Dennis 1971b Photographs by Tom Thomson 1970 National Gallery of Canada Bulletin Galerie Nationale du Canada Bulletin 16 2 36 Sharpe Noble October 30 1956 Re Human Bones received from unmarked grave in Algonquin Park Documents supplied in response to Freedom of Information and Protection of Personal Privacy Act request Centre for Forensic Sciences Toronto June 1970 The Canoe Lake Mystery Canadian Society of Forensic Science 3 2 34 40 doi 10 1080 00085030 1970 10757271 Films Hozer Michele Director and Peter Raymont Producer 2011 West Wind The Vision of Tom Thomson Filmstrip Toronto White Pine Pictures Archived from the original on January 15 2019 Retrieved May 23 2019 McInnes Graham Director 1944 West Wind 35mm film colour National Film Board of Canada Vaisbord David Director 2005 Dark Pines A Documentary Investigation into the Death of Tom Thomson DV Cam colour Vancouver Laughing Mountain Communications Wieland Joyce 1976 The Far Shore 35mm film colour Toronto Far Shore Inc The Group of Seven and Canadian art Cole Douglas Summer 1978 Artists Patrons and Public An Inquiry into the Success of the Group of Seven Journal of Canadian Studies 13 2 69 78 doi 10 3138 jcs 13 2 69 S2CID 152198969 Colgate William 1943 Canadian Art Its Origin and Development Toronto Ryerson Press Davis Ann 1992 The Logic of Ecstasy Canadian Mystical Painting 1920 1940 Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 80206 861 3 Dawn Leslie 2006 National Visions National Blindness Canadian Art and Identities in the 1920s Vancouver UBC Press ISBN 978 0 77481 218 4 Djwa Sandra 1992 Who is This Man Smith Second and Third Thoughts on Canadian Modernism In New W H ed Inside the Poem Essays and Poems in Honour of Donald Stephens Toronto Oxford Press pp 205 15 ISBN 978 0 19540 925 3 Duval Paul 1972 Four Decades The Canadian Group of Painters and Their Contemporaries 1930 1970 Toronto Clarke Irwin ISBN 978 0 77200 553 3 1978 The Tangled Garden Toronto Cerebrus Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 92001 608 4 Eisenberg Evan 1998 The Ecology of Eden Toronto Random House of Canada ISBN 978 0 37570 560 1 Grace Sherrill E 2004b Canada and the Idea of North Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 77353 253 3 Harper J Russell 1966 Painting in Canada A History Toronto University of Toronto Press Harris Lawren July 1926 The Revelation of Art in Canada Canadian Theosophist 7 85 88 1929 Creative Art and Canada In Brooker Bertram ed Yearbook of the Arts in Canada 1928 1929 Toronto Macmillan Company of Canada pp 177 86 October 1943 The Function of Art Art Gallery Bulletin Vancouver Art Gallery 2 2 3 1948 The Group of Seven in Canadian History Canadian Historical Association Report of the Annual Meeting held at Victoria and Vancouver 16 19 June 1948 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 28 38 Hill Charles C 1995 The Group of Seven Art for a Nation Ottawa National Gallery of Canada ISBN 978 0 77106 716 7 Housser F B 1926 A Canadian Art Movement The Story of the Group of Seven Toronto Macmillan Hubbard R H 1963 The Development of Canadian Art Ottawa National Gallery of Canada Jackson A Y Summer 1957 Box car Days in Algoma 1919 20 Canadian Art 14 136 41 Larisey Peter 1993 Light for a Cold Land Lawren Harris s Life and Work Toronto Dundurn Press ISBN 978 1 55002 188 2 MacDonald J E H March 22 1919 The Canadian Spirit in Art The Statesman 35 6 7 December 1919 A C R 10557 The Lamps 33 39 MacDonald Thoreau 1944 The Group of Seven Toronto Ryerson Press MacTavish Newton 1925 The Fine Arts in Canada Toronto Macmillan Martinsen Hanna 1984 The Scandinavian Impact on the Group of Seven s Vision of the Canadian Landscape Konsthistorisk Tidskrift L111 1 17 doi 10 1080 00233608408604038 McInns Graham C 1950 Canadian Art Toronto Macmillan McKay Marylin J 2011 Picturing the Land Narrating Territories in Canadian Landscape Art 1500 1950 Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 77353 817 7 Mellen Peter 1970 The Group of Seven Toronto McClelland and Stewart ISBN 9780771058158 Murray Joan 1984 The Best of the Group of Seven Edmonton Hurtig Publishers ISBN 978 0 77106 674 0 O Brian John White Peter eds 2007 Beyond Wilderness The Group of Seven Canadian Identity and Contemporary Art Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 77353 244 1 Reid Dennis 1971a A Bibliography of the Group of Seven Ottawa National Gallery of Canada Rosenblum Robert 1975 Modern Painting and the Northern Romantic Tradition Friedrich to Rothko New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06430 057 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tom Thomson Tom Thomson Catalogue Raisonne the complete works of Thomson Tom Thomson entry in The Canadian Encyclopedia Tom Thomson Life and Work at Art Canada Institute Tom Thomson collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario Tom Thomson collection at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection Tom Thomson collection at the National Gallery of Canada Tom Thomson Art Gallery Blodwen Davies fonds archived by Library and Archives Canada Portals nbsp Arts nbsp Biography nbsp Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tom Thomson amp oldid 1218377555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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