Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith
Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith | |
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landscape painter | |
Spouse | Annie Myra Dyde (m. 1871) |
Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith
Career
Bell-Smith emigrated to
Throughout the 1870s and 1880s he sketched, painted, and taught art classes in London, Ontario (1881–1888); in St. Thomas, Ontario as Art Director of Alma College (1881–1890) and then as director of the Toronto Art School in 1889.[4] He returned to study in Paris at the Académie Colarossi in 1896.[5]
Painting the Rocky Mountains
In 1886 Bell-Smith seized the opportunity to paint the Canadian Rockies when the Vice-President of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), William Cornelius Van Horne, offered free travel passes to several artists who would sketch and paint vistas of the Canadian west. The CPR wanted artistic works that would heighten public interest in transcontinental travel. Bell-Smith’s stylistically conservative paintings were popular in both eastern Canada and Britain, and he frequently returned to the west to work. He was particularly fond of the natural splendour of the area around Lake Louise and by the turn of the century he made annual trips to the west.[6]
These experiences led Bell-Smith to advocate for a Canadian school of art which drew its uniqueness from the use of the Canadian landscape as its subject matter. Later artists, including Tom Thomson, Emily Carr, and the Group of Seven, contributed to this focus on Canada’s natural environment in art.[7]
Lights of a City Street
Bell-Smith also created many paintings of late Victorian and Edwardian eastern Canada and Britain. One of his most famous and playful paintings is Lights of a City Street, which portrays the intersection of Yonge and King Streets in Toronto in 1894. Bell-Smith depicted himself in the painting as the man buying a newspaper, his son is the man raising his hat, and the policeman is Bill Redford, the constable actually stationed at the corner.[8]
Painting Queen Victoria
In connection with a series of paintings related to the death of Prime Minister Sir
Honours
He was a founding member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 1880.[3] He also belonged to the Society of Canadian Artists (1867) which he helped found; a founder member of the Ontario Society of Artists (1872), of which he was president (1905-1908); the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists (1908); the Palette Club, Montreal (1892); and the New Water Colour Society, Toronto (1900).[5] In 1908 he was a founding member of the Arts and Letters Club of Toronto.[9]
Gallery
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Three Artists, c. 1883
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London Bridge
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Westminster Bridge, ca. 1897
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Mists and Glaciers of theSelkirks, 1911
Record sale prices
At the Cowley Abbott Auction of An Important Private Collection of Canadian Art, December 6, 2023, lot 102, Bell-Smith's School’s Out (1885), watercolour and gouache, 23 x 38 ins ( 58.4 x 96.5 cms ), Auction Estimate: $15,000.00 - $20,000.00, realized a price of $66,000.00.[10]
References
- ^ Boulet 2008.
- ^ Boulet 1977, p. 16.
- ^ a b Boulet 1977, p. 17.
- ^ a b Boulet 1977.
- ^ a b Bradfield 1970.
- ^ Bradfield 1970, pp. 18–19.
- ^ Beinart & Hughes 2007, pp. 221–223.
- ^ Newman 1992, p. 134.
- ^ McBurney 2007, p. 10.
- ^ "School's Out, 1885 by Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith". cowleyabbott.ca. Cowley Abbott Auction. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
Bibliography
- Beinart, William; Hughes, Lotte (2007). Environment and Empire. The Oxford History of the British Empire Companion Series. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Boulet, Roger (1977). Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith (1846-1923). Victoria: Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.
- Boulet, Roger (21 May 2008). "Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
- Boyanoski, Christine (2015). "Figures in the landscape en plein air". In Thom, Ian M. (ed.). Embracing Canada: Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven. Vancouver and London: Vancouver Art Gallery and Black Dog Publishing. pp. 59ff.
- Bradfield, Helen (1970). Art Gallery of Ontario: The Canadian Collection. Toronto: McGraw-Hill.
- McBurney, Margaret (2007). The Great Adventure: 100 Years at The Arts & Letters Club. Toronto: The Arts and Letters Club of Toronto. ISBN 9780969458821.
- Newman, Paul (1992). Canada - 1892: Portrait of a Promised Land. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.
External links
- Ungar, Molly Pulver; Bach, Vicky (2005). "Bell-Smith, Frederic Marlett". In Cook, Ramsay; Bélanger, Réal (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XV (1921–1930) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
- HBC Corporate Collections: Art at Hudson's Bay Company