OC
1927 - 2023
Canadian
Grey Sage
acrylic on canvas
signed and dated 1975 and on verso signed, titled, dated and inscribed "Box 8, Ref. 27" on a label
56 3/4 x 59 in, 144.1 x 149.9 cm
Estimate: $15,000 - $25,000 CAD
Sold for: $20,000
Preview at:
PROVENANCE
By descent to the present Private Collection, British Columbia
EXHIBITED
Art Gallery of Ontario, Changing Visions: The Canadian Landscape, traveling in 1976 - 1977 to the Art Gallery of Windsor; Saidye Bronfman Centre, Montreal; De Cordova and Dana Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts; The Edmonton Art Gallery; The Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenbow - Alberta Institute, Calgary; Burnaby Art Gallery and The Simon Fraser Gallery; London Public Library and Art Museum
There is perhaps no one in the post-war landscape tradition with a more nuanced and delicate handling of light than Dorothy Knowles. As in this work, one of her primary subjects is the prairies of Western Canada, which is known amongst artists to have exceptionally rich, even painterly, natural light. It’s the expression of that light to which Knowles has dedicated her illustrious 70 year career.
A central means by which Knowles deals with luminosity in this period is her use of media. These subtle washes of thinned paint have their roots in the “soak-stain” techniques of Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, and perhaps most comparably, Helen Frankenthaler. Another commonality of these artist is their engagement with the influential New York art critic Clement Greenberg. The same was true for Knowles – Greenberg attended the 1962 Emma Lake Artists’ Workshop in north-central Saskatchewan, which were initiated by Kenneth Lochhead and Arthur McKay in 1955. While history now most relates Greenberg to post-painterly abstraction, he encouraged Knowles to continue on with her representational practice, into which she incorporated the leading influences of the time.
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