Lawren Stewart Harris

Lawren Stewart Harris

1885 - 1970
ALC BCSFA CGP FCA G7 OSA RPS

Harris had a privileged upbringing in the wealthy Massey-Harris family in Ontario. From 1904 to 1907, he studied in Berlin, Germany with Franz Skarbina, Fritz von Willie and Adolf Schlabitz. On his return to Canada, he became a charter member of the Arts and Letters Club in Toronto, where he met most of the future members of the Group of Seven. Harris, along with the patron Dr. James MacCallum, financed the building of the Studio Building in Toronto, which opened in 1914, and kept his studio there, along with other Group of Seven members.

From 1910 to 1918, Harris painted the urban landscape of Toronto. In 1913, an exhibition of modern Scandinavian painting at the Albright Gallery in Buffalo had a profound effect upon Harris, due to its bold expression of raw northern landscape. After this, began to paint beautiful snow scenes as well as the urban scenes.

Another shift took place around 1918 when Harris traveled to Algoma on a sketching trip with fellow Group of Seven artists using a railway box car as a base. His work became more rugged and dramatic, and was shown in 1920 in the first Group of Seven exhibition, which established the presence of a new landscape school.

A pivotal experience occurred in 1921, when Harris went to the shore of Lake Superior, producing stark and compelling paintings of this region. His style of reducing the landscape to its essential form, and his interest in the spiritual in nature grew, and 1924 saw his first visit to the Rockies, and the start of his powerful mountain paintings. He also traveled to the Arctic, and was inspired by the sculptural landscapes there.

In 1934 Harris married his second wife Bess Housser, and relocated to Hanover, New Hampshire. He then moved to Sante Fe, New Mexico in 1938, where he became one of the founding members of the Transcendental Painting Group. Harris’s expansive beliefs based on Theosophy led him to explore abstraction deriving from the spiritual energy emanating from nature. Harris might have stayed in Sante Fe if it were not for the intervention of World War II. Canada, having declared war on Germany, set restrictions on funds leaving the country and, unable to get the money they needed to live on, the Harrises returned to Canada in 1940 and later that year settled in Vancouver. Harris continued with his abstract work, while becoming deeply involved in the Vancouver art scene. He served as an executor of Emily Carr’s estate and established the Emily Carr Scholarships, was the chair of the exhibitions committee at the Vancouver Art Gallery, and in 1944 became the President of the Federation of Canadian Arts. In 1960 he was appointed to the board of the National Gallery of Canada.

Harris’s life was a transformative one, beginning as a powerful nationalistic landscape painter, then evolving into abstraction which transcended borders.

Copyright Heffel Gallery Limited



Heffel's Top Results

Lawren Stewart Harris
Pine Tree and Red House, Winter, City Painting II
32 x 38in 81.3 x 96.5cm
oil on canvas

Estimate:  $800,000 - $1,200,000 CDN
Sold for:   $2,875,000 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Spring 2007 auction on Wednesday, May 23, 2007



Lawren Stewart Harris
Grey Day, North Shore, Lake Superior (Lake Superior Painting XI)
40 x 52in 101.6 x 132.1cm
oil on canvas

Estimate:  $800,000 - $1,200,000 CDN
Sold for:   $1,782,500 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Fall 2007 auction on Friday, November 23, 2007



Lawren Stewart Harris
Mount Lefroy
12 x 15in 30.5 x 38.1cm
circa 1929
oil on board

Estimate:  $200,000 - $250,000 CDN
Sold for:   $1,667,500 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Spring 2006 auction on Thursday, May 25, 2006



Lawren Stewart Harris
Houses
30 1/2 x 32 1/2in 77.5 x 82.5cm
oil on canvas

Estimate:  $800,000 - $1,200,000 CDN
Sold for:   $1,380,000 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Fall 2007 auction on Friday, November 23, 2007



Lawren Stewart Harris
Snow, Algonquin Park
18 x 20in 45.7 x 50.8cm
circa 1916 - 1917
oil on canvas

Estimate:  $300,000 - $400,000 CDN
Sold for:   $1,035,000 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Spring 2007 auction on Wednesday, May 23, 2007



Lawren Stewart Harris
Cathedral Mountain from Yoho Valley, Mountain Sketch LXXXVI
12 x 15in 30.5 x 38.1cm
circa 1929
oil on board

Estimate:  $125,000 - $175,000 CDN
Sold for:   $747,500 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Spring 2006 auction on Thursday, May 25, 2006



Lawren Stewart Harris
In the Ward - Grocery Store
32 x 38in 81.3 x 96.5cm
oil on canvas

Estimate:  $600,000 - $800,000 CDN
Sold for:   $667,500 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Fall 2002 auction on Thursday, November 14, 2002



Lawren Stewart Harris
Above Lake Superior
32 1/8 x 37 1/8in 81.6 x 94.3cm
circa 1926
double-sided oil on canvas

Estimate:  $250,000 - $350,000 CDN
Sold for:   $661,250 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Fall 2004 auction on Thursday, November 25, 2004



Lawren Stewart Harris
Lake Superior Sketch X (Pic Island)
12 x 15in 30.5 x 38.1cm
circa 1924
oil on board

Estimate:  $300,000 - $500,000 CDN
Sold for:   $575,000 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Spring 2007 auction on Wednesday, May 23, 2007



Lawren Stewart Harris
Ice Berg, Smith Sound, II
12 x 15in 30.5 x 38.1cm
1930
oil on board

Estimate:  $300,000 - $500,000 CDN
Sold for:   $575,000 CDN (premium included)
At Heffel's Fine Canadian Art Spring 2007 auction on Wednesday, May 23, 2007


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