Landscape with Encampment on a Timber Raft
38.4 cms x 55.9 cms (15.12 ins x 22 ins)
Initialed
Lot offered for sale by Heffel, Vancouver at the auction event "Spring 2015 Live auction" held on Wed, May 27, 2015.
Lot 161
Lot 161
Estimate: CAD $8,000 - $12,000
Realised: CAD $47,200
Realised: CAD $47,200
Lot description - from the online catalogue*
Provenance:
Private Collection, United Kingdom
Literature:
Janet E. Clark and Robert Stacey, Frances Anne Hopkins, 1838 - 1919: Canadian Scenery, Thunder Bay Art Gallery, 1990, a similar work entitled Timber Raft on the St. Lawrence, collection of the Royal Ontario Museum, reproduced page 77
Notes:
Frances Anne Hopkins came to Canada in 1858 from London, England, settling in Lachine, Quebec, with her husband, who was a Hudson's Bay Company official. She spent 12 years in Canada and was a pioneer recorder of socio-historical images such as the life of the voyageurs, the fur trade industry, canoe travel and the transportation of lumber. She was an artist during a time when being a woman in this pursuit was unusual, as it was the preserve of British military officers trained in watercolour who documented early Canadian scenes. The subject of the timber raft was of great interest to Hopkins - these distinctive rafts were often seen on major Canadian rivers such as the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers at the time. This intriguing work is full of visual interest with its simple shelter, men huddling around a blazing fire and a canoe with fishermen. Hopkins's fine ability with watercolour is particularly evident in her handling of these details and of the soft, hazy atmosphere that envelops the scene.
Private Collection, United Kingdom
Literature:
Janet E. Clark and Robert Stacey, Frances Anne Hopkins, 1838 - 1919: Canadian Scenery, Thunder Bay Art Gallery, 1990, a similar work entitled Timber Raft on the St. Lawrence, collection of the Royal Ontario Museum, reproduced page 77
Notes:
Frances Anne Hopkins came to Canada in 1858 from London, England, settling in Lachine, Quebec, with her husband, who was a Hudson's Bay Company official. She spent 12 years in Canada and was a pioneer recorder of socio-historical images such as the life of the voyageurs, the fur trade industry, canoe travel and the transportation of lumber. She was an artist during a time when being a woman in this pursuit was unusual, as it was the preserve of British military officers trained in watercolour who documented early Canadian scenes. The subject of the timber raft was of great interest to Hopkins - these distinctive rafts were often seen on major Canadian rivers such as the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers at the time. This intriguing work is full of visual interest with its simple shelter, men huddling around a blazing fire and a canoe with fishermen. Hopkins's fine ability with watercolour is particularly evident in her handling of these details and of the soft, hazy atmosphere that envelops the scene.
Most realised prices include the Buyer's Premium of 18-25%, but not the HST/GST Tax.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Heffel auction house for permission to use.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Heffel auction house for permission to use.