Art Gallery of Hamilton

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File:Art Gallery of Hamilton.JPG
Art Gallery of Hamilton from King St. W.

Art Gallery of Hamilton, is located in the heart of downtown Hamilton, Ontario on King Street West. One of the oldest public art galleries in Canada and the third largest with a collection of over 10,000 works of art seeing close to 290,000 visitors a year.[1]

History

Today, the William Blair Bruce memorial donation is displayed in a dramatic salon-style hanging in what is the Art Gallery of Hamilton’s third home.

From 1914 until 1953, the Gallery’s first home was the second floor of the Hamilton Public Library building located on Main Street West near James Street.

In 1947, the Gallery was a founding member of the Southern Ontario Gallery Group, now the Ontario Association of Art Galleries.

In December 1953, a new purpose-built gallery was opened at Forsyth Avenue and Main Street in west Hamilton. A little over a decade later, McMaster University unveiled plans to expropriate the lands on which the Gallery was built, halting plans to expand the Gallery in this location.

In 1977, the Gallery opened in its present location in the heart of the city as part of a downtown redevelopment project.[2]

In 2005, a renovated Gallery reopened, with new gold-coloured steel cladding protecting the building, a glass-enclosed front entrance on King Street, a new multi-purpose pavilion, and larger and renovated exhibition spaces.

Collection highlights

Jef Lambeaux, The Murder, Irving Zucker Sculpture Court

The AGH primary collection is based on Canadian historical, Canadian contemporary and European historical art.

Historical Canadian Art

The collection of historical Canadian art was developed through the meticulous promotion of local, regional and national artists over the Gallery's 100 year history.[3]

European Art

The European collection spans Baroque through Post-Impressionist Art, with particular emphasis on the French, British and Italian schools.[4]

Modern and Contemporary Art

The Art Gallery of Hamilton’s collection of modern Canadian art is one of the strongest in the country, due, in no small part to the vision and efforts of Thomas Reid (T.R.) MacDonald (1908–1978), the Gallery’s first full-time director and curator.[5]

MacDonald soon inaugurated the Annual Winter Exhibition at the Gallery; this yearly exhibition was held from 1948-1973. These juried exhibitions provided artists with an important exhibition venue and also brought works to Hamilton that might be acquired by the Gallery.[6]

Usually about one hundred works were featured in each exhibition, with the purchase prize (generally donated by a local patron or business) entering the AGH permanent collection. In this way, many important works were acquired, such as A.J. Casson’s First Snow, Lilias Torrance Newton’s Keith MacIver, and the iconic Horse and Train by Alex Colville.[7]

Selected as the purchase prize in 1954, Horse and Train was panned by The Hamilton Spectator art critic Mary Mason, who wrote: “There are undoubtedly some very fine paintings out at the Art Gallery of Hamilton in this year’s Winter Show, but the winner of the purchase prize is not, alas, one of them.”[8]

Exhibitions

Each year, the Gallery organizes, hosts and/or circulates approximately 25-30 exhibitions throughout the world.[9] Recent exhibitions include: Into the Light: The Paintings of William Blair Bruce (1859-1906), The World is an Apple: The Still Lifes of Paul Cezanne, Illuminations: Italian Baroque Masterworks in Canadian Collections and Are You Experienced?

Images

References

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  3. Bruce, Tobi. "Lasting Impressions," Hamilton: 2005, pp. 18-19
  4. Cable, Patrick Shaw (ed.) Heaven and Earth Unveiled: European Paintings from the Tanenbaum Collection, Hamilton: 2005
  5. Bruce, Tobi. "Modern Ambition: A Canadian Collection Comes of Age" in Bruce, Tobi. (ed.) (2005), p. 17.
  6. Bruce, Tobi. "Modern Ambition: A Canadian Collection Comes of Age" in Bruce, Tobi. (ed.) (2005), pp. 24-25.
  7. Zemans, Joyce. "Considering the Canon" in Bruce, Tobi. (ed.) (2005), pp. 177-189.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Quoted in Bruce, Tobi (ed.). (2005), p. 26.
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External links

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