- Homer Watson
Infobox Artist
name = Homer Watson
imagesize = 150px
caption =
birthname = Homer Ransford Watson
birthdate = birth date|1855|01|14
location =Doon ,Ontario ,Canada
deathdate = death date and age|1936|05|27|1851|5|30
deathplace =Doon ,Ontario ,Canada
nationality = Canadian
field =Painting
training =
movement = American Barbizon School
works = "The Flood Gate" (1900)
patrons =
influenced by =Barbizon School ,Hudson River School
influenced =
awards =Homer Ransford Watson (
January 14 ,1855 –May 30 ,1936 ) was a Canadianlandscape painter . He was "the man who first saw Canada as Canada, rather than as dreamy blurredpastiches of European painting," according toJ. Russell Harper , a former curator of Canadian art at the National Gallery of Canada. He was a member and president (1918-1922) of theRoyal Canadian Academy , as well as a founding member and first president (1907-1911) of theCanadian Art Club .Life and career
The son of Ransford Watson and Susan Mohr, he was born in the village of Doon (now part of Kitchener),
Ontario . He received his first set of paints from an aunt and he decided to become an artist. He sought the advice ofThomas Mower Martin inToronto , and moved there in 1874. He copied works at theToronto Normal School and was mainly self-taught, but met other artists in Toronto (e.g., Lucius O'Brien) while working part-time at a photography studio.In 1876, he traveled to
New York and met the painterGeorge Inness . He was influenced by theHudson River School and painted along the Hudson andSusquehanna River s in theAdirondack Mountains . In 1880, he sold his first major work, "The Pioneer Mill," to the Marquis of Lorne forQueen Victoria 's art collection. That same year, the marquis opened the first exhibition of the Royal Canadian Academy; Watson's work was displayed and he was elected an Associate.In 1881, he married Roxanna Bechtel, and the couple moved into the Drake House at Doon. They bought the house in 1883, and he would keep the house as his permanent residence until his death. Watson painted the rural Grand River countryside for most of his artistic life. He was noted for his commitment to Canadian landscapes: he said "there is at the bottom of each artistic conscience a love for the land of their birth... no immortal work has been done which has not as one of its promptings for its creation a feeling its creator had of having roots in his native land and being a product of its soil."
In 1882, while touring Canada,
Oscar Wilde dubbed Watson the "Canadian Constable," comparing him to the great English landscape artist because of similar subject matter and style. Wilde would occasionally visit Watson in his home and they sent letters to each other. The letters as well as Watson'sdeath mask are lost in theblack market . They last resurfaced in the early 1990s only to disappear again.Watson moved to
England in 1887 for four years, and further established his reputation. Over the next few years, his works became increasingly popular among collectors and received prizes at expositions across North America. In 1902, at the height of his British career, he exhibited "The Flood Gate".He campaigned to save the
Waterloo County woodlands that he had preserved in his landscapes. After the death of Roxa in 1918, he was joined by his sister Phoebe in Doon. He was forced to sell many works from his personal collection by the Stock Market Crash of 1929.He died in Doon. Many of his works are still on display at his old house, which he and his sister had transformed into a small art gallery.
On
May 27 ,2005 ,Canada Post issued a pair ofpostage stamp s in his honour. Two stamps of denominations 50 and 85 cents were issued depicting two of his works, "Dawn in the Laurentides" and "The Flood Gates".An arterial road in
Kitchener-Waterloo , which connects the Doon area to the main parts of the city, is named Homer Watson Boulevard.External links
* [http://www.homerwatson.on.ca/ Homer Watson House & Gallery]
* [http://www.mta.ca/faculty/arts/canadian_studies/english/about/study_guide/artists/homer_watson.html Biography at Mount Allison University]
* [http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/pm.php?id=exhibit_home&fl=0&lg=English&ex=00000243 Virtual Museum on Homer Watson]
* [http://www.londonmuseum.on.ca/Historical/First_Ren/watson.html London Ontario Museum on Homer Watson]
* [http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/discipline/SpecColl/archives/watson.html University of Waterloo Library Holdings on Homer Watson]Further reading
"Homer Watson: not your average pastoral picnic: selections from the permanent collection." Kitchener, ON: Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery, 2005.
Miller, Muriel. "Homer Watson : the man of Doon" Toronto: Summerhill Press, 1988.
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