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Artworks
Jori SmithPercé, 1935 (circa)1907-2005SoldInscriptions
signed twice, ‘Jori Smith’ (lower left); titled and dated, ‘Percé middle 30’s’ (verso)Provenance
Property of a Distinguished Montreal Collector
Jori Smith’s extensive career beginning with her studies under Randolph Hewton in 1922 at the Montreal Art Association is well described on Concordia University’s site : Canadian Women Artists History Initiative
It is likely a legitimate overview to say that among her greatest contributions to Canadian art are her figure studies and her sketches of the Charlevoix region in the years she and her husband, filmmaker Jean Palardy when they lived there for about 10 years 1930- 1940. Percé and Jeune fille are important examples. While Smith and Palardy were living in St Urbain, Surrey wrote of his visit with them, “They had a tiny, one-room house at St. Urbain, near Baie St. Paul. their warm but casual invitation to visit them when I had a few days holiday coming to me, I accepted. I went by the Canadian Steamship Line which had a stop at Murray Bay. For me it was a marvelous experience. Some of the local people living only eight miles or so back from the St. Lawrence, had never seen “Le Fleuve”. They had few radios. They used horses. There were few cars and many people still wore homespun. I was just in time to see the end of the old habitant life that had been almost unchanged for 200 years. They were still amusing themselves by themselves, singing their own beautiful old songs, square dancing the music played by a fiddler, having their “veillées”, (parties), at each other’s houses.” [1]
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Footnote:
[1] Margaret Surrey, Biographical notes of Philip Surrey, Philip and Margaret Day Fonds, P85A, National Archives of Canada, Estate Philip Surrey, 69.
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