Artist: Patrick Douglass Cox
Title: ALONG THE CREEK
Date: 2014
Medium: egg tempera on board
Dimensions: 16 x 12 in. (40.6 x 30.5 cm)
Notes:
signed, titled & dated
LOT: 79
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Richard Audley (Dick) Freeman
Title: HIS KINGDOM
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 20 x 30 in. (50.8 x 76.2 cm)
Notes:
signed & titled
LOT: 78
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: George A. Horvath
Title: HORSES IN SPRINGBANK
Date: 1981
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 24 x 36 in. (61 X 91.4 cm)
Notes:
signed & dated; titled on a plaque
LOT: 77
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Harold Lloyd Lyon
Title: ROUNDING UP THE HERD
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 20 x 36 in. (50.8 x 91.4 cm)
Notes:
signed
LOT: 75
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Harold Lloyd Lyon
Title: END OF THE DAY
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 24 x 36 in. (61 x 91.4 cm)
Notes:
signed
LOT: 74
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Nicholas de Grandmaison
Title: MOTHER AND CHILD
Medium: pastel on paper
Dimensions: 25 x 21 in. (63.5 x 53.3 cm)
Notes:
signed
LOT: 73
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Nicholas de Grandmaison
Title: SITTING EAGLE - JOHN HUNTER (1874-1970)
Medium: pastel on paper
Dimensions: 24 x 18.5 in. (61 x 47 cm)
Notes:
signed
Note: Sitting Eagle was a noted patriarch of the Chiniki Band of the Stoney Tribe in Morley, Alberta. He was recognized for his business and ranching acumen, and among other tributes, was commemorated by the Calgary Stampede Board in 1951.
Descended from French and Russian aristocracy, Nicholas de Grandmaison had a cultured upbringing, studying music, art, history and languages. At 19, he enlisted in the Russian Army and served during World War I, where he became a German prisoner of war. During his four years of internment, he turned to portraiture as a diversion, painting fellow officers, and even German officers. After the war, he eventually made his way to London, where his courtly manners and charm helped him gain admission to the St. John’s Wood School of Art and to secure painting commissions.
De Grandmaison emigrated to Canada in 1923, listed officially as a “farm worker”, though once arriving in Manitou, Manitoba, it became clear that he had no affinity or desire for farm work. He joined the Art Club of Winnipeg, secured work at a printing/engraving firm, and was soon again seeking commissions – these were often of children, though he would later say that he did not like to paint children “for they have not lived enough or suffered enough to have interesting faces.”
In 1930, on a trip to The Pas, in northern Manitoba, de Grandmaison was first exposed to First Nations people living in a traditional setting . He was immediately captivated and sought out opportunities to draw them. It became his mission in life. He travelled west of Winnipeg and to various Cree communities in Saskatchewan, then to Southern Alberta where he encountered the Blackfoot, Sarcee, Peigan, Stoney, and Blood Tribes. After a period of living and teaching in Calgary, the de Grandmaisons finally settled in Banff, where Nicholas would set up his home and studio. De Grandmaison held a romantic vision of the Plains Indians as the aristocrats of North America; he felt a strong affinity with them, perhaps as a result of having experienced the destruction of his own culture during the Russian Civil War.
De Grandmaison’s greatest contribution is in the artistic preservation of First Nations people, to which he devoted four decades . Whether drawing a great Chief, an elder, a warrior, or a mother and child, his dignified and emotive portraits capture not only the essence of the individual as a person, but as a member of a proud and ancient people.
Nicholas de Grandmaison’s honours include membership in the Royal Canadian Academy, the Order of Canada, and an honourary degree from the University of Calgary. Yet his greatest tribute came upon his death in 1978, when Nicholas de Grandmaison (Enuk-sapop or Little Plume) was buried on the Peigan Reserve, having been made an Honorary Chief in 1959.
LOT: 72
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Stanley Morel Cosgrove
Title: TETE DE FEMME
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 16 x 12 in. (40.6 x 30.5 cm)
Notes:
signed; titled on gallery labels verso
Provenance: Dominion Gallery, Montreal, QC; Kastel Gallery, Westmount, QC
LOT: 116
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Eric Goldberg
Title: ST. IRENEE
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions: 21 x 29 in. (53.3 x 73.7 cm)
Notes:
signed; titled on artist’s and exhibition labels verso
Exhibited: Canadian National Exhibition: Canadian Paintings and Sculpture, 1951 (Toronto, ON)
Provenance: Dominion Gallery, Montreal, QC
LOT: 114
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions
Artist: Henri Leopold Masson
Title: TWO MONKS
Medium: mixed media on paper
Dimensions: 24 x 19 in. (61 x 48.3 cm)
Notes:
signed
LOT: 113
Auction: 2017 May | Hodgins Art Auctions