TAG Art Gallery Home About Us Events Newsletter Contact Us
Fine Art
 

Tormasi Art Gallery

Fine Art
Welcome to TAG Art Gallery's Fine Art section.

Fine Art:
Includes works in the historical Canadian tradition, such as landscapes and portraits.


We are very proud to have pieces selected from the following artists in our collection:

Artists:
 
Barker Fairley was a scholar, a literary and art critic - and an artist. Decades after his death he remains a respected German scholar on Goethe.
It was his writing on the Group of Seven that first brought Fairley into art. The Group of Seven invited Fairley to join several of their famous sketching trips. As an art critic in the 1920s, he was their enthusiastic supporter. Their relationship left a deep impact on Fairley's understanding of the land. It has been said that Fairley considered his portraits to be landscapes of the face. After a 40-year career at University of Toronto, in retirement he devoted considerable time to his painting (see his 1981 book, Portraits) and enjoyed increasing recognition as a painter of portraits, landscapes and still-lifes. Over the course of his life, Fairley accumulated many honours, including the Order of Canada.
 
Mediums:
oil on board
   
View Collection For Barker Fairley (1887-1986)

 

 

 

 ((Manly Edward MacDonald was born August 15, 1889 at Point Anne, Ontario. In 1902, at age thirteen, he successfully tried the high school examination in art in nearby Belleville, Ontario. In October, 1908, MacDonald enrolled in the Ontario College of Art (OCA) in Toronto and at age 22, in 1911, began courses at the Albright School of Art in Buffalo, New York. 1912 and 1913 saw MacDonald continue his art studies at the prestigious Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts. From 1914 to 1916, he returned to the Ontario College of Art in Toronto and in 1917 received his first scholarship from the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (RCA), enabling him to travel through Europe during the First World War, drawing and taking in the war effort. While in France, he married fellow OCA student, Beverly Lambe. MacDonald was commissioned in 1918 by the Canadian War Memorials Fund and the National Gallery of Canada to paint scenes of women working in the fields in the Quinte region of Ontario.That same year he was elected a member of the Ontario Society of Artists (OSA). In 1920 Manly MacDonald became an Associate of the Royal Canadian Academy and received a second RCA Scholarship, traveling through France, Italy, Spain and Great Britain. On his return from Europe in 1922, he painted full time while his young family lived in Belleville. This was also where he held his first public exhibition. At the same time, MacDonald opened a studio on Severn Street in Toronto's Rosedale ravine area. In 1924 he exhibited at the prestigious Wembley Exhibition, Middlesex, England and showed again in 1925, at the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley, Middlesex, England, in the new Canadian pavillion.

   By 1926, the Canadian art scene was changing as more traditional painters, like MacDonald, felt shunted aside by new ideas at Ontario Society of Artists. MacDonald's portraits were, however, considered to be the best in the OSA Exhibition at the Art Gallery of Toronto that year. In 1932, Manly MacDonald's work was recognized by his alma mater at the Albright School of Art in Buffalo, New York. His work was included in the 1936 Art Gallery of Toronto's "Pictures by Canadians" Exhibition. He also continued to exhibit at the Canadian National Exhibition, Fine Arts Canada show for many years. In 1938, the Canadian High Commissioner, Vincent Massey announced a major exhibition of Canadian art to be held at the Tate Gallery, London, England  A number of MacDonald's pieces were on display and he was included in the Canadian art exhibition at the 1939 New York World's Fair.

   By 1940, MacDonald began teaching at the Royal Canadian Academy, Toronto. He also taught at the Ontario College of Art (& Design) from 1943 to 1944. Also in 1944, MacDonald exhibited in the Rio de Janeiro, Brazil with the Canadian Exhibition of Contemporary Art. Over four decades, his work was included with other prominent artists in the Coutts and then Coutts-Hallmark Canadian Christmas Card Series. He displayed his paintings at the Belleville Spring Fair in 1945, which became an annual event. In demonstrating his humble and kind character, Manly MacDonalddonated a painting to the Canadian Federation of University Women's Club of Belleville and District towards a scholarship for a young woman each year. He also gave each recipient a painting. From 1946 to 1947, he again taught at the Ontario College of Art (and Design), all the while continuing to paint, exhibit and accept commissions.

   By 1948, he was now an Academician of the Royal Canadian Academy (ARCA). MacDonald, along with three contemporaries, resigned in protest in 1951 from the Ontario Society of Artists, in a simmering  disagreement with other artists over the OSA's emphasis on what MacDonald called "creeping modernism". Although he had been an active member of OSA for over thirty years, his name was stricken from the record and remains so to this day.

  (In) 1955,  MacDonald accept(ed) a commission by the Toronto St. Clair Avenue Granite Club to paint two large winter murals. The MacDonald family bought a summer home in 1956 at the Long Reach, Bay of Quinte, south of Napanee, Ontario where he sketched and painted the pastoral landscapes of the area, as well as spoke to groups of interested people. MacDonald always had time for others, teaching incidentally to those who dropped by, or through more formal lessons. He received a commission from the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority in 1957 to commemorate the establishment of the seaway and painted seven Eastern Ontario mills. In 1958, Manly MacDonald became a founding member of the Ontario Institute of painters. (OIP). He was chosen to paint the skyline of Toronto in 1959, as a gift from the city to Queen Elizabeth II on her state visit. The commission raised the ire with more modernist artists. In 1960, Manly MacDonald mounted an exhibit at the Royal College of Art in England and for the Ontario Institute of Painters in Toronto. He returned to teach again at OCA in the 1960's before ill health forced him to stop. His wife Beverley died in 1969 at the age of 79.

  Manly Edward MacDonald died at Toronto's Wellesley Hospital, on April 10th, 1971. He was 81.

  This semi-impressionistic painter always saw himself as a traditionalist, but he experimented with technique, style and mediums throughout his lifetime. A plein air painter, MacDonald could as easily paint an impressionistic landscape as a traditional scene of horses ploughing a field, or sheep crossing a bridge. He painted portraits in both genres as well as in pastels and was also adept with etchings and drypoints, producing his own sets of Christmas cards. It is said that he gave away as many pieces as he sold, but there was always a sense that he would provide for his family.

  MacDonald's art can be seen in major galleries across Canada, including the National Gallery of Canada and the new Canadian War Museum. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II owns two of his paintings in the Royal Collection Enterprises. The largest public collections are held by the John M. Parrott Art Gallery, housed in the new Belleville Public Library and at Loyalist College, also in Belleville. Many more remain in private hands, found in Canada and around the world, passed down through families who knew Manly MacDonald personally, or who bought them when they sold for very little.

   (Source) -Charles Beale, author of Manly E. MacDonald (1889-1971) - Interpreter of Old Ontario   (with permission)

 
Mediums:
oil on canvas
   
View Collection For Manly Edward MacDonald, RCA, OCA, OIP (1889-1971)

 

 
One knowledgeable gallery owner suggests the artist is of the Group of Seven School based on the subject and technique of the "Untitled" painting currently hanging in the gallery and on view in our web site's Fine Arts slide show. (Click on 'View Collection' at right and go to the list of artists.)
The view across a boreal-forest lake of the Canadian Shield, with sunlight reflecting off the far shore and multi-hued clouds filling the sky, speaks to a clear Group of Seven influence (particularly Tom Thomson's works of Algonquin Park). Our "unknown artist" seems to have found calm and serenity in this setting, rather than the wildness and menace which are the undertones of many Thomson paintings.
The "impasto" technique of this piece is one often used by the Group of Seven School. Paint is "thickly applied to a canvas or panel so that it stands in relief and retains the marks of the brush or palette knife," (Dictionary of Art). The method gives a painting a three-dimensional texture and the artist has a control of reflected light different than from a flat surface.
 
Mediums:
Oil on panel
   
View Collection For Unknown Artist




Contact Us
Featured Gallery
Historical Works
Historical Works
Historical Works
Jewellery
View More