In The Maple Grove
71.7 cms x 91.4 cms (28 ins x 36 ins)
Signed l.r.: "J. Johnstone"; titled and dated on a label on the reverse: "L'Erablière" "1925"
made in 1925
Lot offered for sale by Sothebys, Toronto at the auction event "Important Canadian Art" held on Thu, Dec 3, 2009.
Lot 43
Lot 43
Estimate: CAD $40,000 - $60,000
Realised: CAD $45,000
Realised: CAD $45,000
Lot description - from the online catalogue*
Provenance:
Private Collection, Quebec
Literature:
A.K. Prakash, "John Young Johnstone Retrospective Exhibition", Galerie Walter Klinkhoff, 2005, p. 4
Notes:
Despite being a member of the Beaver Hall Group, exhibiting with the Royal Canadian Academy, and having four major canvases similar to this one in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada, John Young Johnstone remains a relatively unknown artist. Like his peers Morrice and Cullen, Johnstone studied in Europe and adopted the style of the Impressionists and their followers. Although this is evident in his oeuvre, Johnstone's paintings elicit a stillness and melancholy that is uniquely his own. In a catalogue written for a Johnstone retrospective at Galerie Walter Klinkhoff, the only such exhibition to date, A.K. Prakash observes that he was
"a man who displayed respect for tradition yet was one of the first of the Moderns among all the Canadian painters at the dawn of the twentieth century".
Painted in 1925, "In the Maple Grove" is a resolved splendid canvas that reflects the artistic maturity that Johnstone achieved in many of his later works. His palette is sophisticated and assured, and the brushwork is wonderfully expressive. A warm light diffuses the whole canvas, and the details of the figures and the distant houses are wrought with great care. The balance of shadow and sunshine, deployed with astonishing originality, invigorates the scene with unusual forms and layered colours.
Johnstone's small, exquisite oil sketches are rare while his larger canvases are rarer still. If a few more paintings of this calibre came to notice, Johnstone's reputation would be permanently established.
Private Collection, Quebec
Literature:
A.K. Prakash, "John Young Johnstone Retrospective Exhibition", Galerie Walter Klinkhoff, 2005, p. 4
Notes:
Despite being a member of the Beaver Hall Group, exhibiting with the Royal Canadian Academy, and having four major canvases similar to this one in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada, John Young Johnstone remains a relatively unknown artist. Like his peers Morrice and Cullen, Johnstone studied in Europe and adopted the style of the Impressionists and their followers. Although this is evident in his oeuvre, Johnstone's paintings elicit a stillness and melancholy that is uniquely his own. In a catalogue written for a Johnstone retrospective at Galerie Walter Klinkhoff, the only such exhibition to date, A.K. Prakash observes that he was
"a man who displayed respect for tradition yet was one of the first of the Moderns among all the Canadian painters at the dawn of the twentieth century".
Painted in 1925, "In the Maple Grove" is a resolved splendid canvas that reflects the artistic maturity that Johnstone achieved in many of his later works. His palette is sophisticated and assured, and the brushwork is wonderfully expressive. A warm light diffuses the whole canvas, and the details of the figures and the distant houses are wrought with great care. The balance of shadow and sunshine, deployed with astonishing originality, invigorates the scene with unusual forms and layered colours.
Johnstone's small, exquisite oil sketches are rare while his larger canvases are rarer still. If a few more paintings of this calibre came to notice, Johnstone's reputation would be permanently established.
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 Sothebys auction house for permission to use.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Sothebys auction house for permission to use.