DISPONIBLE
Jock Macdonald: Life & Work
Par Joyce Zemans
Born in Thurso, Scotland, Jock Macdonald (1897–1960) arrived in Vancouver in September 1926 as the newly appointed head of design at the recently established Vancouver School of Decorative and Applied Arts (now the Emily Carr University of Art + Design). Over the next three decades he was a trailblazer in Canadian art. He was the first painter to exhibit abstract art in Vancouver and he championed Canadian avant-garde artists at home and abroad. As a teacher, Macdonald became a mentor and inspiration for several generations of artists. He was a founding member of both the Canadian Group of Painters and Painters Eleven, and he was instrumental in the creation of the Calgary Group. While based in Vancouver, Macdonald made a powerful connection with the spectacular and rugged scenery of British Columbia. His identification with nature and his determination to capture the spiritual rhythm of the universe in paint set him on a quest that shaped his art for the rest of his life. In 1957, just three years before Macdonald’s death, Toronto art critic Robert Fulford proclaimed the artist “the best young abstract or non-objective painter in Canada, even though he was born in 1897.”
40$ CA
ISBN 9781487102951
Couverture rigide | 8 x 11 | 160 pp
– 80 illustrations couleur
– 4 chapitres clés : Biographie, Œuvres phares, Questions essentielles ainsi que Style et technique
– Glossaire des termes importants, des personnes et des organisations
– Liste illustrée des institutions où trouver les œuvres de l’artiste