Florence Helena McGillivray
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Florence Helena McGillivray (March1, 1864May 7, 1938), also known as F H. McGillivray, was a Canadian landscape painter known for her
Post-Impressionist Post-Impressionism (also spelled Postimpressionism) was a predominantly French art movement that developed roughly between 1886 and 1905, from the last Impressionist exhibition to the birth of Fauvism. Post-Impressionism emerged as a reaction ag ...
style. Her family home was in Whitby, Ontario. She lived in Ottawa from 1914 to 1928. She was also a teacher. In 1916, on a visit to his studio, she encouraged Tom Thomson.


Early life, education and career

Florence McGillivray was born in
Pickering Township Pickering (2021 population 99,186) is a city located in Southern Ontario, Canada, immediately east of Toronto in Durham Region. Beginning in the 1770s, the area was settled by primarily ethnic British colonists. An increase in population occurre ...
in Canada West on March 1, 1864. She was the eleventh of thirteen children, and the youngest female of the Scottish immigrant farmer, George McGillivray (1813-1894) and his wife, Caroline Amelia Fothergill McGillivray (1828-1909). In 1870, the family moved to Inverlynn, a house located at 1300 Gifford Street in Whitby, Ontario. To this day, the property has remained in the possession of George McGillivray's descendants. The children attended a grammar school in Whitby, and since McGillivray had shown artistic talent in her early years, she attended the Central Ontario School of Art (now the Ontario College of Art) in Toronto, where she studied with William Cruikshank. McGillivray then began taking private lessons from teachers such as Farquhar McGillivray Knowles and
Lucius Richard O'Brien Lucius Richard O'Brien (or L. R. O'Brien as he was known) (15 August 1832 – 13 December 1899) was an influential 19th-century Canadian oil and watercolour landscape artist. Life and career Lucius O'Brien was born in Shanty Bay, Upper ...
. In the 1890s, McGillivray was renowned for painting on china. From 1892 until 1905, she worked as an art teacher at an all boys’ school, Pickering College in Pickering, Ontario, and in Whitby at the Ontario Ladies’ College (now
Trafalgar Castle School Trafalgar Castle School in Whitby, Ontario is an internationally known, independent day and boarding school for girls and young women in grades 4 through 12. Boarding at the school begins in grade 7. Founded in 1874 as "Ontario Ladies' College", ...
) as a resident art teacher from 1906 to 1923. In 1912, she went to France to study at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière with Lucien Simon and Émile-René Ménard (1862–1930). But her real inspiration was the artist
Frédéric Fiebig Frédéric Fiebig ( lv, Frederiks Fībigs; 1885–1953) was a Latvian-born painter who lived in France. He was influenced by both post-Impressionism and Cubism and is considered a member of the Expressionist movement. Fiebig was a great travele ...
and though she experimented at first with a wide range of Post-Impressionist styles, she began to work in a style that reflected his influence, involving the use of the palette knife and with a heavier application of paint. That year, she showed her new work at the Salon des Beaux Arts.


Art career

In 1913, McGillvray had her painting ''Contentment'' exhibited at the Salon des Beaux Arts in Paris. McGillivray moved back to Canada in 1914 due to the outbreak of World War I. The most prolific and vibrant phase of her artistic career occurred during the 1920s while she lived in Ottawa, where she set up a studio on Frank Street. Her work from this period is rich in colour and texture, reflecting the Post-Impressionist work she had encountered in Europe. Her method of rendering forms in massed areas of colour applied in places with the palette knife and strong black lines around forms, made her work stand out in the Canada of her day. This technique was sympathetic to Tom Thomson, who admired her and said of her, "she is one of the best". McGillvray was one of the first women artists to paint the landscape of northern Ontario and Quebec. Her work depicted many locations on the
Gatineau River The Gatineau River (french: Rivière Gatineau, ) is a river in western Quebec, Canada, which rises in lakes north of the Baskatong Reservoir and flows south to join the Ottawa River at the city of Gatineau, Quebec. The river is long and drains ...
, the Val-des-Bois, the
Ottawa River The Ottawa River (french: Rivière des Outaouais, Algonquin: ''Kichi-Sìbì/Kitchissippi'') is a river in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec. It is named after the Algonquin word 'to trade', as it was the major trade route of Eastern ...
at
Fort-Coulonge Fort Coulonge is a village in the Pontiac Regional County Municipality in western Quebec, Canada, at the mouth of the Coulonge River. It is the francophone centre of the otherwise largely (57%) anglophone Pontiac MRC, with 79.6% listing French a ...
and many more scenes of Canada and abroad in places such as Europe, Bermuda, Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbadoes and the Bahamas. She was part of the group of artists that linked the romantic-realist view of the railway artists in the 1880s and 1890s and the view of the landscape that characterized the work of the Group of Seven and their adherents following the World War I.


Exhibitions

*1913 Salon des Beaux Arts, Paris, exhibited ''Contentment'' *1914 - 1935 exhibited with the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts *1917 - 1938 exhibited with the
Ontario Society of Artists The Ontario Society of Artists (OSA) was founded in 1872. It is Canada's oldest continuously operating professional art society. When it was founded at the home of John Arthur Fraser, seven artists were present. Besides Fraser himself, Marmaduke M ...
*1920 - 1930 exhibition venues included Malloney's in Toronto, Continental Galleries in Montreal; and artist's own Frank Street Studio in Ottawa *1924 British Empire Exhibition, ''Canadian Section of Fine Arts'', Wembley, England *1927 ''Exposition d’art canadien'', Musee du Jeu de Paume, Paris *1928 ''Exhibition of Paintings of At Home and Abroad'' by F.H. McGillivray, A.R.C.A., O.S.A., Art Association of Montreal *1970
retrospective A retrospective (from Latin ''retrospectare'', "look back"), generally, is a look back at events that took place, or works that were produced, in the past. As a noun, ''retrospective'' has specific meanings in medicine, software development, popu ...
exhibition, Whitby Arts, Whitby, Ontario *2002 ''The Birth of the Modern: Post-Impressionism in Canadian Art, c.1900-1920'', Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa; travelled to Montreal, London (Ontario), Fredericton, and Winnipeg *2017 ''Finding Florence'', retrospective exhibition, Station Gallery, Whitby, Ontario


Selected public collections

Three of her paintings are part of the National Gallery of Canada collection, ''Midwinter, Dunbarton, Ontario'' (1918), ''Afterglow'' (1914), and ''St. Anthony Harbour, Newfoundland'', (1926). the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Art Gallery of Hamilton, the Agnes Etherington Art Centre and galleries in Oshawa, Whitby, Kitchener, London, and Windsor also have her work in their collections.


Affiliations

Florence Helena McGillivray was affiliated with a number of associations and groups during her lifetime. She joined the
Women's Art Association of Canada The Women's Art Association of Canada (WAAC) is an organization founded in 1887 to promote and support women artists and craftswomen in Canada, including artists in the visual media, performance artists and writers. At one time it had almost 1,000 ...
where she studied painting on china with
Mary Dignam Mary Ella Dignam (Born Mary Ella Williams; 1857–1938) was a Canadian painter, teacher, and art organizer best remembered as the founder and first president of the Women's Art Association of Canada (WAAC). Life Mary Ella Williams was born in P ...
, its founding president. McGillivray was welcomed into groups which included the Society of Women Painters and Sculptors of New York (1917) and the Women Painters and Sculptors Art Club. She continued her study of painting on china with Marshall Fry in New York in 1898 and sold her pieces later from her studio in Whitby. She also gave painting classes in Whitby. In the later years of McGillivray's life she joined the
Ontario Society of Artists The Ontario Society of Artists (OSA) was founded in 1872. It is Canada's oldest continuously operating professional art society. When it was founded at the home of John Arthur Fraser, seven artists were present. Besides Fraser himself, Marmaduke M ...
(1917), became an Associate member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (1924), and was a Charter member of the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour and its first woman member (1925).


Later years

McGillivray traveled extensively in search of new landscape scenery to paint. In 1930, by then in her mid-60s, McGillivray bought a house in Toronto where she retired. She continued to paint primarily from the sketches she had accumulated from around the world. In 1937, Marion Long painted her portrait, now in the Art Gallery of Ontario. Shown at the Royal Canadian Academy show that year, it was pronounced "capital" by a reviewer in the ''Montreal Gazette'', November 19, 1937. McGillivray never married and had no children. She died at age 74 in Toronto, on May 7, 1938, and is buried in Oshawa's Union Cemetery.


References


Bibliography

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:McGillivray, Florence Helena 1864 births 1938 deaths Members of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Canadian women painters 19th-century Canadian painters 20th-century Canadian painters 19th-century Canadian women artists 20th-century Canadian women artists Canadian landscape painters Canadian watercolourists Canadian Post-impressionist painters 20th-century women painters