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LOT 228

AAM ARCA BHG
1893 - 1986
Canadien

Moving Snow, Berthierville
huile sur toile, circa 1925
signé
18 x 24 po, 45.7 x 61 cm

Estimation : 90 000 $ - 120 000 $ CAD

Vendu pour : 94 400 $

Exposition à : Heffel Toronto – 13 avenue Hazelton

PROVENANCE
Acquired directly from the Artist by a Private Collector, Montreal
Sold sale of Fine Canadian Art, Heffel Fine Art Auction House, November 24, 2005, lot 30
Peter and Joanne Brown Collection, Vancouver

BIBLIOGRAPHIE
Frances K. Smith, Kathleen Moir Morris, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, 1983, page 13


Kathleen Moir Morris is known for her eloquent paintings of the streets, markets and gathering places of her native Quebec. Immediately recognizable, Morris’s boldly executed compositions compel our aesthetic admiration and incite our curiosity about the places, people and daily rituals of a bygone era. Morris attended classes with William Brymner at the Art Association of Montreal between 1907 and 1917. During this time she developed her keen perceptual and technical skills and established pivotal friendships with female peers such as Henrietta Mabel May, Prudence Heward and Sarah Robertson, artists with whom she later joined to form the short-lived Beaver Hall Group in the early 1920s. Morris was exposed to emerging international stylistic trends at the AAM and contemporary concerns with light, colour and composition. Her skills would be honed further during summer sketching excursions led by Maurice Cullen, a pre-eminent Canadian exponent of the Impressionist school.

Berthierville, east of Montreal, was one of Morris’s favoured painting places, offering the pictorial interest she needed to create her inspired images: "snow, horses, [and] a town centre with church buildings." Moving Snow, Berthierville typifies the artist’s affinity for the prosaic subject and her fondness for snowy scenes that contain clusters of people and horses, the latter pictured either at work or waiting patiently at Burleau sleighs and cab stands. Here, Morris’s sensitive representation of the working animals betrays her particular affection for them, and the rhythmically rendered, tactile surface is an almost palpable expression of a damp winter’s day. However, beyond the painting’s emotive and sensory dimensions, Moving Snow, Berthierville is also a significant example of Morris’s interest in progressive formal and stylistic explorations. The reductiveness she employs in the articulation of her figures, the flattened, somewhat decorative compositional arrangement as well as her interest in unusual chromatic dynamics remind us that Morris figures among Canada’s important early-twentieth-century interpreters of a modern visual vocabulary.


Estimation : 90 000 $ - 120 000 $ CAD

Tous les prix affichés sont en dollars canadiens


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