A Grand Eye for Glory: A Life of Franz Johnston

Front Cover

Franz Johnston is the missing man of Canadian painting. The most prolific and financially successful of the original Group of Seven, Johnston's paintings were among the most sought after in Canada in the years between the mid-1920s and his death in 1949. They appear in the collections of dozens of discriminating private collectors, and in institutions such as the National Gallery, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the McMichael Canadian Collection, and the Canadian War Museum. As well, his work once hung, in thousands of well-loved reproductions, on the walls of ordinary people's homes the length and breadth of the country. And yet, for all his distinguished success, Johnston is no more than a footnote in the many histories of the Group of Seven, and is rarely mentioned in the context of the general development of art in Canada in the twentieth century.

Johnston was born and raised in Toronto, worked with J.E.H. MacDonald, Fred Varley, Arthur Lismer, and Franklin Carmichael at Grip, the famous commercial art studio in Toronto, and served with distinction as an official war artist in the last years of the First World War. He subsequently taught at the art schools in Winnipeg and Toronto (he was the principal of the Winnipeg Art School and Gallery for four years in the early 1920s) before opening his own art school on the shores of Georgian Bay. When the Group of Seven held its first, seminal exhibition at the Art Museum of Toronto in May 1920, Johnston exhibited and sold more paintings than any of the others.

In this, the first biography of Franz Johnston, the author seeks to provide a guide to the life, work, and times of this unjustly neglected, but influential figure in Canadian art and culture. Beautifully illustrated with sixteen four-colour reproductions of Johnston's best paintings, and rare black-and-white photographs from a family collection and other sources.

 

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
6
INTRODUCTION
7
Early Years
15
Johnston the War Artist
25
From a Boxcar in the Algoma Country
31
Johnston in Winnipeg
41
The Split with the Group of Seven
53
Snow and Light Painting the Northland
59
Painting the Arctic
73
Slim Pickings
83
An Interview with Wenawae Stevenson
87
BIBLIOGRAPHY
97
Copyright

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Page 14 - I have even known. If one had a customer for a certain type of painting he might stay up and work all night, if necessary, to have it ready for the next day, and a sale.
Page 14 - A bit of a rake and a great ladies' man, he would appear resplendent in an artist's tarn, a bow tie with long side ribbons, and a well-trimmed imperial beard. By the mid- 1940s, Johnston was selling his pictures for more money by far than any other living Canadian.

About the author (1998)

Roger Burford Mason moved with his wife and son from England to Toronto in 1988. Since then he has published two collections of short stories, a collection of travel essays, two biographies, and a book about Canada. He has written for many Canadian, U.S., and British magazines and newspapers, and has broadcast on a number of Canadian radio stations. He is the editorial director of a group of business publications, and a contributing editor of Canadian Notes & Queries. Among his previously published books are: Telling the Bees (Hounslow, 1990); The Beaver Picture (Hounslow, 1992); Travels in the Shining Island: The Life of the Rev. James Evans (Natural History/Natural Heritage, 1996); Roy Vernon Sowers: A Life in Rare Books

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