Wednesday
Oil on Panel Bird Paintings
During a few days in the winter I painted a collection of various song birds, sparrows, Evening Grosbeaks, etc.
And I decided to experiment with a smaller, more intimate scale; 5" x 7", etc.
These are not included in the current exhibit.
Canadian Painter Tom Thomson's New Auction Record
Painting by Tom Thomson (This is the only painting on this blog that's not mine).
An iconic oil sketch by Tom Thomson was the centrepiece of a Sotheby's art auction on Monday, May 26, 2008 in Toronto.
Ash Prakash, a high-end art collector, bought the Thomson piece for nearly $2 million.
The vibrant oil sketch depicts three spindly trees silhouetted against a sunset is believed to have been painted in 1915 or 1916.
Before Monday's auction, it was estimated that the work would sell for between $900,000 and $1 million. After a bidding war, it sold for $1,957,000, including buyer's premium.
"There was lots of interest," said Stephen Ranger, president of Ritchie's Auctioneers. "There were three bidders on that picture -- and there even could have been more."
The buyer of the artwork, ASH PRAKASH kept quiet about his personal life but was pretty clear about why he thought the piece was well worth the price.
"I am particularly delighted to give it a home this time in Canada where it belongs," he told CTV Toronto.
The high-end art collector has a special spot at home set aside for the new painting, though he wouldn't say where.
There has been a surge in interest in the works of Thomson, who died in 1917 under mysterious circumstances in Ontario's Algonquin Park.
His "Tamarack Swamp (Sketch #5)" sold for $1 million earlier this month in Vancouver. It was Thomson's sixth painting to sell for over $1 million. Another piece is expected to sell for seven figures at a Joyner Waddington auction in Toronto on Tuesday.
Although he wasn't a member, Thomson's work was aligned with the Group of Seven, whose members also captured the beauty of the northern Ontario landscape.
Group of Seven
Group member Arthur Lismer's painting, "Pine Island, Georgian Bay," sold for $318,500 -- twice its estimated value. That sum included the buyer's premium.
The sale features works by other members of the Group Of Seven, including Franklin Carmichael's "La Cloche Hills" and Lawren Harris' "North Shore."
"After decades in private collections, many works are returning to auction and demonstrating the vigorous growth of the Canadian art market," said a Sotheby's Canada news release.
Works by group members Frederick Varley and A.Y. Jackson sold for more than $500,000 in Vancouver last week.
"Cape Mudge," by Emily Carr, another artist closely associated with the group, was also to be on the auction block.
The sale was to feature 218 lots with presale estimates ranging from $6 million to $8.5 million. In addition to paintings, it includes sculptures, prints and drawings.
Other highlights of Monday's sale include works by Douglas Coupland, Atilla Lukacs and Tony Scherman, of the Painters Eleven group.
The auction, a joint effort between Sotheby's Canada and Ritchie's Auctioneers was held at 380 King Street East in Toronto.
"It makes for an outstanding survey of Canadian art history and is highlighted by paintings of an impeccable pedigree. Many of these works have been sourced internationally," Sotheby's said.
With a report from CTV Toronto's Tom Hayes
You can find out more about Thomson's life here:
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0007981
Saturday
Here's How the Exhibit Looks on Display at the Saint John Arts Centre May 16 - June 28
Thursday
Art Exhibit on until June 27 at the Saint John Arts Centre
24" x 24" Oil on gallery-wrapped Canvas
Always inspiring to live here on this amazing coast! After I was finished with this painting last night, the moon that came up over the bay was a tangerine orange! Gwen and I sat outdoors in the seclusion of the cedars that surround the firepit watching the sky transform itself.
Tuesday
Art Exhibit at Saint John Arts Centre May16 - June 27
Between now and the end of June you can see 44 of my paintings on display in the library, and in another adjoining room at the Saint John Arts Centre formerly known as the 'ABEC'. The centre is currently undergoing brick and mortar maintenance.
Above is a 12" x 12" (top), and a 16" x 16" (below). Both are included in the exhibit.
I'm back to jewelry making for now, but will have to post some interior pics of the gallery and exhibit as soon as I get back there to take shots.
By the way, the building was built 'round the turn of the 20th century, and was funded by Carnegie as one of his famous 400 library gifts to the whole of the continent.
Carnegie libraries are libraries which were built with money donated by Scottish-American businessman and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. Over 2,500 Carnegie libraries were built, including those belonging to public and university library systems. Carnegie earned the nickname Patron Saint of Libraries.
Of the 2,509 libraries funded between 1883 and 1929, 1,689 were built in the United States, 660 in Britain and Ireland, 156 in Canada, and others in Australia, New Zealand, Serbia, the Caribbean, and Fiji. Very few towns that requested a grant and agreed to his terms were refused. When the last grant was made in 1919, there were 3,500 libraries in the United States, nearly half of them paid for by Carnegie.
In the early 20th century, a Carnegie library was the most imposing structure in hundreds of small American communities from Maine to California. Most of the library buildings were unique, displaying a number of different Beaux-Arts and other architectural styles, including Italian Renaissance, Baroque, Classical Revival and Spanish Colonial. Each style was chosen by the community and was typically simple and formal, welcoming patrons to enter through a prominent doorway, nearly always accessed via a staircase. The entry staircase symbolized a person's elevation by learning. Similarly, outside virtually every library was a lamppost or lantern to symbolize enlightenment.