Art canadien classique
Lunenburg, N.S, 1945 (circa)
30.5 x 40.6 cm
Inscriptions
signed, ‘A LISMER’ (lower left); titled and signed, ‘Lunenberg [sic] / N.S. / A Lismer’ (verso)Provenance
Kastel Gallery, Westmount, Quebec
Private collection, St-Bruno-de-Montarville, Quebec
This Arthur Lismer shows a Lunenburg’s shipyard scene with workers engaged in the construction of a wooden vessel. Lismer focuses on the scale of the ship, its skeletal ribs dominating the composition. Demonstrative of Lismer’s interest in the working life of the people of coastal Nova Scotia, he captures several of the boatbuilders working away at their respective tasks. Historically, boatbuilding was a defining industry of Lunenburg.
In the next generation of painting in Canada the identity of the Maritimes was developed by Mary & Christopher Pratt, Alex Colville, Tom Forrestall, Lawren S. Harris in painting and, in printmaking, David Blackwood.