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LOT DETAILS
         
         
         
         

This session is closed for bidding.
Current bid: $2,250 CAD
Bidding History
Paddle # Date Amount

29732 30-Mar-2023 04:54:45 PM $2,250

39180 30-Mar-2023 04:50:51 PM $2,000 AutoBid

29732 30-Mar-2023 04:50:51 PM $1,900

39180 30-Mar-2023 04:37:18 PM $1,800 AutoBid

29732 30-Mar-2023 04:37:18 PM $1,700

39180 30-Mar-2023 04:34:14 PM $1,600 AutoBid

29732 30-Mar-2023 11:51:54 AM $1,500

39180 30-Mar-2023 11:47:08 AM $1,400

29732 21-Mar-2023 04:51:46 PM $1,300

871417 16-Mar-2023 03:18:15 PM $1,200

29732 09-Mar-2023 05:03:44 PM $1,100

8664 09-Mar-2023 05:03:28 PM $1,000 AutoBid

29732 09-Mar-2023 05:03:28 PM $900

8664 04-Mar-2023 09:47:59 AM $800 AutoBid

29732 02-Mar-2023 11:01:48 PM $700

The bidding history list updated on: Friday, March 29, 2024 03:53:01

LOT 410

1873 - 1954
Canadian

In the Garden (France)
oil on canvas
signed and inscribed "Paris" and on verso titled on labels and inscribed “Picking Flowers” and “77”
18 x 15 in, 45.7 x 38.1 cm

Estimate: $1,500 - $2,500 CAD

Sold for: $2,813

Preview at:

PROVENANCE
Ronald T. Riter Collection, The Estate of Mary Riter Hamilton, Vancouver


After studying in Germany under Franz Skarbina, Mary Riter Hamilton traveled to Paris and studied at private art schools. She achieved recognition in France for her work, exhibiting at the Paris Salon in 1905. A second trip to Europe took place to Paris, Berlin, Vienna and Florence, with studies in Holland. Hamilton returned to Canada in 1911.

In 1917 and 1918, Hamilton applied to become an official war artist through the Canadian War Memorials Fund, but was turned down by Edmund Walker, chairman of the National Gallery’s advisory board. Likely the idea of sending a woman artist into danger amid the harsh conditions on the front in World War I was simply unthinkable at the time. However, in 1919, she was commissioned by the magazine The Gold Stripe to document the postwar battlefields in Belgium and France. She was Canada’s first female battlefield artist, revealing that “I came out because I felt I must come, and if I did not come at once it would be too late.” Although Hamilton could not fight, she could portray the deeds of those who did – her commitment to documenting the aftermath of war, and her empathy for what happened, was extraordinary.

She arrived in Paris on April 15, 1919. Although the war was over, soldiers were still there, in the process of demobilization and part of cleanup crews restoring order to the land. It was an unsettled time, with refugees and social unrest the new reality. Hamilton had to gain permission to access the war zone to such locations as the northern and southern district of Vimy Ridge. She slept in abandoned huts and bunkers left behind by the soldiers, painting the remains of trenches, ruined buildings and damaged landscapes, documenting them as they were, not glorifying them. It took courage to go to those battlefield sites. Canadian soldiers in Europe were an important part of the war effort, such as at Vimy Ridge. Hamilton stated, “It was always my ambition to make a collection of paintings of typical Canadian scenes, and as fate would have it some of the landscapes with which the history of Canada will be found up for generations are here in France, 6,000 miles away.” After years of painting under difficult conditions in locations such as Ypres (Belgium) and the Somme, and settings in the far north of France such as Loos, Mons, Cambrai and Bourlon Wood, Hamilton was emotionally and physically exhausted, and she suffered a collapse in summer of 1921. She was admitted to hospital in 1922, and took years to recover.

Hamilton began to exhibit her war works as early as 1919, and in 1920 exhibited war paintings at the Navy League Institute, organized by IODE. In 1922 she had an exhibition of her war art in the Paris Opera House titled Les champs de bataille de la Somme, along with the French official war painter Georges Bertin Scott. That same year she exhibited 100 paintings at the Pantheon: Aux Morts Français et Allies at the Musée de Picardie.

Hamilton made a vitally important contribution to the documentation of the First World War, and a substantial group of her war works, comprised of 227 paintings and drawings, are in the collection of the National Archives of Canada.


All prices are in Canadian Dollars


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