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From Gagnon to Duranleau: The Art of Rural Quebec Clarence Gagnon is best known for his rural Quebec landscape paintings and the illustrations for Louise Hémon’s novel Maria Chapdelaine. He was born in a small village in rural Quebec. Although he trained and maintained a studio in Paris for much of his career, he never lost his love of the Laurentians and the Charlevoix region of eastern Quebec which inspired many of his paintings. As a young artist, Gagnon traveled to Paris to study at the Académie Julian from 1904 to 1905. In 1908, Gagnon returned to Canada, and settled in Baie-Saint-Paul region of Charlevoix which became his preferred sketching area. His affection for French-Canadian life is evident in his anecdotal series of depictions of habitant life, a theme to which he returned throughout his career. From 1909 to 1914 Gagnon moved between Canada, France and Norway, always working up the sketches he had made in Quebec. After a successful 1913 Paris show, Gagnon portrayed the Canadian landscape almost exclusively, and generally in wintertime. He invented a new type of landscape - a winter world composed of valleys and mountains, of sharp contrasts of light and shadow, of vivid colours, and of sinuous lines. He ground his own paints, and from 1916 his palette consisted of pure white, reds, blues and yellows. From 1924 to 1936 Gagnon lived in Paris once again. He began devoting most of his energy to creating the illustrations for two works of fiction Le Grand Silence blanc by L. F. Rouquette (Paris, 1928) and Marie Chapdelaine by Louis Hémon (Paris, 1933), a story that celebrated Canadian frontier life. In 1936 Gagnon returned to Canada where he died on 5 January, 1942. Clarence Gagnon was a a full member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (1922). In 1923, he received the Trevor Prize of the Salmagundi Club of New York. -Adapted from the National Gallery of Canada
Clarence Gagnon (1881-1942) The Yellow House, 1912 Musee National des Beaux-Arts du Quebec
Clarence Gagnon (1881-1942)
Musee National des Beaux-Arts du Quebec Marcel Fecteau was born in Quebec in 1927 and has been painting the Quebec landscape in a variety of mediums over the past 40 years. One of the six founding members of the Norditude du Parc des Grands Jardins de Charlevoix, his landscapes of the mountains and villages of the Gaspesie and Charlevoix reconcile us with nature via the profound harmony, color and balance in his compositions.
MARCEL FECTEAU IAF Norbertville, Quebec Oil on canvas; 20 x 16 in $2500
MARCEL FECTEAU IAF Les Eboulements, Quebec Oil on canvas; 16 x 20 in $2500
Jean Lamoureux First Snow in the Laurentiens oil on canvas, 20" x 24" SOLD
Jean Louis Hébert Winter Countryside (oil on canvas, 16" x 20") $950
Jacques Poirier Chute en Automne Oil on canvas; 24 x 30 in $2800 Jacques Poirier was born in 1942 in Drummondville, Quebec. He chose drawing early in his life as a means of expression and creation. A university graduate, Poirier taught fine art though he is basically self taught. Drawn to the mountainous regions of Quebec he renders them in his studio after making sketching trips. His works share a unique graphic element, involving geometrically shaped landscapes, without appearing too rigid. Jacques was instrumental in founding an art studio at the University of Sherbrooke. His work is represented throughout Canada and is part of many important collections. Yvon Duranleau Born in the country village of Saint-Malo, in the Eastern Townships southeast of Montreal, Yvon began drawing and painting nature from an early age. Largely self-taught, he is inspired by past masters of the Quebec landscape, Fortin and Suzor-Cote. He travels throughout the province from his home in Coteau-du-Lac painting primarily in oil and concentrating on the villages and landscapes of his native Quebec. He has won numerous awards over the past 30 years and exhibits in galleries throughout Canada and the US. Parc du Grand Jardin 16 x 20 OIL ON CANVAS $1600
Yvon Duranleau St. Jean des Pils 24 x 20 OIL ON CANVAS $2000 Yvon Duranleau Journee d'Hiver, Notre-Dame des Monts 9 x 12 OIL ON CANVAS Yvon Duranleau Et la Jour Prit Fin, Les Eboulements, Charlevoix 16 x 20 OIL ON CANVAS $1600 Copyright © Yvon Duranleau |
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Blue Hill Bay Gallery 11 Tenney Hill, Blue Hill, Maine 04614
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