“I don't suppose you
do know precisely what you are after.
I don't think in the creative process anyone quite knows.
They have a vague idea - a beckoning, an inkling of some truth -
it is only in the process that it comes to any clarity.”
Lawren Harris
I don't think in the creative process anyone quite knows.
They have a vague idea - a beckoning, an inkling of some truth -
it is only in the process that it comes to any clarity.”
Lawren Harris
The painter Lawren Harris is one of Canada’s best kept
secrets. A member of the highly influential early 20th Century
artistic association The Group of
Seven, Harris is considered by many to be one of Canada’s leading
artists whose landscapes from the 1920’s regularly attract million dollar
hammer falls at auction. But south of the border Harris is virtually an
unknown.
As the deputy director of curatorial
affairs at Los Angeles’ Hammer
Museum, Cynthia Burlingham, told the artnet news last month “With very few exceptions, I have not met an
American who knows Lawren Harris, unless they are married to a Canadian or have
lived in Canada."
Born with the proverbial silver
spoon in his mouth Harris inherited the Massey-Harris industrial fortune and
consequently was able to devote his life to his art.
As a 19 year old Harris spent three years in Berlin prior
to the First World War where he produced a series of Impressionist-influenced,
decorative landscapes. He also became interested in the quasi-religious philosophy
of the Theosophical Society whose teachings were to have a profound effect upon
his work.
After a stint in the Canada army during WWI, Harris
returned to his easel to paint the Canadian wilderness and over a ten year
period made a series of paints that today are considered to be his finest
works.
About which he is reported to have said “If we view a great
mountain soaring into the sky, it may excite us, evoke an uplifted feeling
within us. There is an interplay of something we see outside of us with our
inner response. The artist takes that response and its feelings and shapes it
on canvas with paint so that when finished it contains the experience.”
After a messy divorce and remarriage in his 40’s along with his
continuing search for spiritual enlightenment Harris adopted abstraction as the
primary motivation for his painting.
“Abstract art is a creative interplay between the conscious and the
unconscious, with the conscious mind making all the final decisions and in
control throughout,” he is reported to have said.
For the next 30 odd years, until his death in 1970, Harris painted spiritually
influenced abstract works that reflected his life long search for meaning.
As he has been reported as saying “The primary function of art is not to
imitate or represent or interpret, but to create a living thing; it is the
reduction of all life to a perfectly composed and dynamic miniature – a
microcosm where there is perfect balance of emotion and intellect, stress and
strain resolving itself, form rhythmically poised in three dimensions.”
The exhibition The
Idea of North: The Paintings of Lawren Harris is
currently on show at the Hammer Museum until the 24th
of January next year.
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