Hundreds and Thousands: The Journals of Emily Carr

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D & M Publishers, 1 de des. 2009 - 448 pàgines
Emily Carr’s journals from 1927 to 1941 portray the happy, productive period when she was able to resume painting after dismal years of raising dogs and renting out rooms to pay the bills. These revealing entries convey her passionate connection with nature, her struggle to find her voice as a writer, and her vision and philosophy as a painter.
 

Pàgines seleccionades

Continguts

MEETING WITH THE GROUP OF SEVEN
21
SIMCOE STREET 193033
43
THE ELEPHANT 1933
69
TRIP TO CHICAGO 1933
100
MOVING FORWARD 193334
125
NOAHS ARK 1934
169
HOPES AND DOLDRUMS 193435
192
SPRING AND SUMMER 1935
242
A TABERNACLE IN THE WOOD 1935
263
BECKLEY STREET 1936
291
GOODBYE TO LIZZIE 1936
334
HOSPITAL 1937
364
THE SHADOW OF WAR 193839
398
NEW GROWTH 194041
414
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Passatges populars

Pàgina 23 - I'm going off on a tangent tear. There is something bigger than fact: the underlying spirit, all it stands for, the mood, the vastness, the wildness, the Western breath of go-to-the-devil-if-you-don't-like-it, the eternal big spaceness of it. Oh the West! I'm of it and I love it.
Pàgina 23 - Quebec and three canvases up Skeena River. I felt a little as if beaten at my own game. His Indian pictures have something mine lack — rhythm, poetry. Mine are so downright. But perhaps his haven't quite the love in them of the people and the country that mine have. How could they? He is not a Westerner and I took no liberties. I worked for history and cold fact.

Sobre l'autor (2009)

Emily Carr was born in Victoria, British Columbia, in 1871, and died there in 1945. She studied art in San Francisco, London and Paris. Except for a period of fifteen years when she was discouraged by the reception to her work, she was a commited painter. After 1927, when she was encouraged by the praise of the Group of Seven, interest in her paintings grew and she gained recognition as one of Canada’s most gifted artists. Now, nearly sixty years after her death, her reputation continues to grow.

Gerta Moray has spent two decades tracing Emily Carr's career and relationship with the First Nations of British Columbia. Her major monograph, Unsettling Encounters: First Nations Imagery and the Art of Emily Carr (University of British Columbia Press), will appear in 2006.

Moray holds degrees from the Universities of Oxford and Toronto, and from the Courtauld Institute of Art. She is Professor of Art History at the University of Guelph and her research and publications focus on the creative worlds of Canadian contemporary and modern art, looked at through international and feminist perspectives.

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