Ventes notoires
The Terrace, Quebec, 1910-1911
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Provenance
1913 Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris;
1914 Acquired from gallerist Alex Reid, Glasgow, by James Reid Wilson and other Montreal subscribers to give to The Mount Royal Club, Montreal.
Private Collection.
Expositions
1911 Paris - Galerie Georges Petit - Exposition de peintres et de sculpteurs (ancienne Société Nouvelle), March - April 1911; #89 - "La terrasse à Onibec [sic]".; 1913 Rome - Palazzo dell'Esposizione - Prima Exposizione Internazionale d'Arte della Secessione, March-June; 11. "La Terrasse" 1925 Montreal - Art Association of Montreal - Memorial Exhibition of Paintings by James W. Morrice, R.C.A. Jan. 16 - Feb. 15, 1925; #73 - "The Terrace, Quebec" 1937 Ottawa - National Gallery of Canada - James Wilson Morrice, R.C.A. 1865-1924 Memorial Exhibition, Nov. 25- Dec. 27 (also: Art Gallery of Toronto: Jan. 8 -? , 1938; Art Association of Montreal: Feb. 1938); #95 - "The Terrace, Quebec" 1949 Richmond, VA - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts - Painters of Canada: Exhibition of Canadian Painting 1668-1948, Feb. 16 - March 20, organized by the National Gallery of Canada; #53. "The Dufferin Terrace, Québec"; 1949 Boston - Museum of Fine Arts - Forty Years of Canadian Painting, from Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven to the present day, July 14 - Sept. 25, organized by the National Gallery of Canada; #65 - "The Dufferin Terrace”.; 1949 Toronto - Art Gallery of Toronto - Fifty Years of painting in Canada, 1900-1950, Oct.-Nov.; #9 - "Dufferin Terrace".; 1953 Ottawa - National Gallery of Canada - Exhibition of Canadian Painting to Celebrate the Coronation of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, 2 June - 13 Sept., 1953; #52 - "Dufferin Terrace"1958 Venice, Biennale Canada Pavilion - XXIXs Exposizione Biennale Internazionale d'Arte, June 14 - Oct. 19, 1958; #13 - "Quebec: La Terrazza"; 1960 Mexico - Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes - Arte Canadiense, 22 Nov. - Feb. 1961, organized by the National Gallery of Canada; #103 "La Terraza, Québec"; 1965 Montreal - Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal - James Wilson Morrice: 1865-1924, Sept. 30 to Oct. 31 (also: Ottawa, National Gallery of Canada, Nov. 12 to Dec. 5; Québec, Musée du Québec, Jan 5-Feb. 7, 1966, choice from exhibition); #23 - "The Terrace, Quebec / La Terrasse à Québec" (illustrated b/w).; 1966 Vancouver - Vancouver Art Gallery - Images for a Canadian Heritage, 20 Sept.-30 Oct.; #59, “The Terrace, Quebec”; 1985 Montreal - Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal - James Wilson Morrice,, Dec. 6, 1985 - Feb. 2, 1986, (also: Musée du Québec, Feb. 27 to April 20,1986, Fredericton., Beaverbrook Art Gallery, May 15 to June 29, 1986; Toronto, Art Gallery of Ontario, July 25 - Sept. 14, 1986, Vancouver Art Gallery, Oct. 9 to Nov. 23, 1986; #74 - "La Terrasse, Québec / The Terrace, Québec" (ill bw); 1994 Québec - Musée du Québec - Québec, plein la vue, June 1 to Sept. 5; #189 - "La Terrasse, Québec" (illustrated colour); 1997 Québec - Musée du Québec - Le paysage au Québec 1910-1930, Jan. 31 to May 11; #25 - "La Terrasse, Québec" (illustrated in colour).; 2003 Québec - Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec - Marquet au fil de l'eau, May 24 to Sept.7; VI. "La Terrasse, Québec" (illustrated in colour; part of a small group of Morrice paintings displayed alongside the Marquet show). 2009 Montreal - Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal - Grandeur nature: Peinture et photographie des paysages américains et canadiens de 1860 à 1918 / Expanding Horizons: Painting and Photography of American and Canadian Landscape 1860-1918, June 18 to Sept. 27 (also: Vacouver Art Gallery, Oct. 17 to Jan .17,2010); #132 - "La Terrasse, Québec".Galerie Alan Klinkhoff, Montreal, January Sale and Exhibition, January 2015.
Documentation
Catalogue Raisonné 1936 Donald W. Buchanan, C.R. appended to his book James Wilson Morrice. A Biography, Toronto, Ryerson. Page 158, as The Terrace, Quebec. Reproductions: "The Terrace, Quebec" was used twice to represent Morrice in important surveys of Canadian painting: 1945 Donald W. Buchanan: Canadian Painters, from Paul Kane to the Group of Seven.Oxford & London, Phaidon Press Ltd, [1945], fig 19 (full page illustration bw). 1966 Great Canadian Painting: a century of art. [Toronto, Canadian Centennial Pub.Co. c1966], p. 19 (full page illustration colour). It was often used to illustrate exhibition reviews: 1913 Arnaldo Cantu: “La Secessione romana” in Vita d’Arte (Rome), vol. 12 no 1,July-August, p. 46, shown in a group of six works by Renoir, Van Rysselberthe, Manguin, Sisley and Matisse.; 1949 Dorothy Adlow: “The Home Forum” chronicle in Christian Science Monitor (Boston), 12 Sept, p. 8.; 1958 Donald W. Buchanan: “Canada builds a pavilion in Venice” in Canadian Art v. 15 no 1, January 1958, p. 31; 1966 Claude Daigneault: “J.W. Morrice au Musée” in Le Soleil (Québec), 15 Jan., p. 20. 2003 Bernard Levy: "Albert Marquet: entre la mer et l'eau douce" in Vie des Arts (Montréal), summer, p.32 (col.) In addition, in 2003, the Musé du Québec commissioned Presses Avalon (Montréal) to print a greeting card and a large image to be sold in conjunction with the Marquet exhibition. Some mentions, by its title only, in exhibition reviews: The Gazette (Montreal), 5 Feb. 1938, p.11; The Montreal Star, 1 Oct. 1965, p.40.
James WIlson Morrice was born in Montreal, lived in Paris and travelled half the world, but each time he crossed the Atlantic he found time to visit Québec City and nearby Côte-de-Beaupré. Most of his Canadian subjects are winter scenes, since he usually came home for Christmas. Only one important canvas can be associated to a summer trip, “The Terrace, Québec”. There are a few smaller works; a view of the Humber River in Toronto is dated 1894 by its first owner, a college friend of Morrice; a two-month stay in the summer of 1903, during which Morrice spent some time at Beaupré with Maurice Cullen and Edmund Morris, did not seem to have inspired him at all.
The third known summer trip, in 1910, was slightly more productive, since Morrice painted at least two sketches: a portrait of his friend William Brymner at home in Saint-Eustache, near Montréal (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts), and a “View of the Terrace with the Kiosque à musique from the Parc des Gouverneurs”, which the artist developed into the present canvas. A third sketch perhaps also dates from that trip, a nocturne view of the Château Frontenac and the Dufferin Terrace (private collection; see klinkhoff.ca; or Montreal Museum of Fine Arts 1985 retrospective exhibition, catalogue 24, wrongly dated 1897).
On June 14, 1910, David Morrice Sr. and Annie S. Anderson celebrated their Golden Wedding Anniversary. Their son, of course, had every intention of attending, since he wrote down the name of three ships leaving Europe for New York in early June (“Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Sketchbook #15”, p. 58). He finally boarded the “S.S. La Lorraine” at Le Havre on the 11th, disembarking in New York on the 17th, and probably reached Montreal the next morning… Too late! He stayed in Canada until the end of July, returning via Boston and Liverpool.
The canvas “The Terrace, Québec” was painted in Paris in time for the annual exhibition of the ex-Société Nouvelle group which opened in March 1911. Two years later Parisian dealer Bernheim Jeune included it in a group of “French Impressionists” at to Prima Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte della Secessione in Rome, where it was hung beside a Matisse .The painting arrived in Montreal in 1914, as a gift to a private club. Since then, it has been part of every major Morrice show plus being lent to many others, which makes it one of the best known works by the artist.
The sketch was painted very quickly, no doubt because the artist was already familiar with the subject. He had drawn it in the winter of 1906 (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Sketchbook #16, p. 50) and again three years later, in late January 1909 (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Sketch #15, p. 26); that time he also recorded the colors on a small panel (National Gallery of Canada inventory no. 3192), on which he based the beautiful “View Towards Lévis from Québec”, which premiered at the Salon de la Société Nationale (Paris) in April, 1909. It was cold that January, and even if Morrice stayed inside to paint the National Gallery of Canada sketch, it bears witness to the weather: few colors, few details. In the summer view, the paint flows more freely, the colors are more varied. At this point in his career, Morrice used his sketches as aide-mémoires: in very few brushstrokes he noted the music kiosk, the tree, the Lévis shore. The grass in the park was perhaps still yellow, so he left the wood bare, and its color complement the green foliage. He gave slightly more importance to the center zone, the river and the little boat.
The composition of the canvas follows the sketch, but the result is totally different. Unlike the strict horizontal compositions of the 1909 (“View towards Lévis from Quebec”) or of the many “Quai des Grands Augustins, Paris” that Morrice had painted since 1904, here the main lines are slightly askew, especially the Lévis shore. This dynamism is heightened by the strong but very bright colors: unlike Morrice’s usual “atmospheric” landscapes, this canvas is full of life and joy, somewhat reminiscent of the paintings of the Fauves that Morrice had seen at the 1905 Salon d’Automne.
But Morrice could not totally renounce his Anglo Saxon Protestant temperament: the foliage is artificially extended over the whole length of the canvas, keeping the top of the composition on the surface, and it looks as if he had used a ruler to draw the railing and the sidewalk. The kiosk, which in reality is located on the grass and not on the terrace, is also brought into line... and was perhaps based on a photo to get the details. This is expected for a composition where the overall effect is more important than the parts. The result is beautiful, a ray of sunshine in Morrice’s Canadian output.
Copyright © Lucie Dorais, 2014
The third known summer trip, in 1910, was slightly more productive, since Morrice painted at least two sketches: a portrait of his friend William Brymner at home in Saint-Eustache, near Montréal (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts), and a “View of the Terrace with the Kiosque à musique from the Parc des Gouverneurs”, which the artist developed into the present canvas. A third sketch perhaps also dates from that trip, a nocturne view of the Château Frontenac and the Dufferin Terrace (private collection; see klinkhoff.ca; or Montreal Museum of Fine Arts 1985 retrospective exhibition, catalogue 24, wrongly dated 1897).
On June 14, 1910, David Morrice Sr. and Annie S. Anderson celebrated their Golden Wedding Anniversary. Their son, of course, had every intention of attending, since he wrote down the name of three ships leaving Europe for New York in early June (“Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Sketchbook #15”, p. 58). He finally boarded the “S.S. La Lorraine” at Le Havre on the 11th, disembarking in New York on the 17th, and probably reached Montreal the next morning… Too late! He stayed in Canada until the end of July, returning via Boston and Liverpool.
The canvas “The Terrace, Québec” was painted in Paris in time for the annual exhibition of the ex-Société Nouvelle group which opened in March 1911. Two years later Parisian dealer Bernheim Jeune included it in a group of “French Impressionists” at to Prima Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte della Secessione in Rome, where it was hung beside a Matisse .The painting arrived in Montreal in 1914, as a gift to a private club. Since then, it has been part of every major Morrice show plus being lent to many others, which makes it one of the best known works by the artist.
The sketch was painted very quickly, no doubt because the artist was already familiar with the subject. He had drawn it in the winter of 1906 (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Sketchbook #16, p. 50) and again three years later, in late January 1909 (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Sketch #15, p. 26); that time he also recorded the colors on a small panel (National Gallery of Canada inventory no. 3192), on which he based the beautiful “View Towards Lévis from Québec”, which premiered at the Salon de la Société Nationale (Paris) in April, 1909. It was cold that January, and even if Morrice stayed inside to paint the National Gallery of Canada sketch, it bears witness to the weather: few colors, few details. In the summer view, the paint flows more freely, the colors are more varied. At this point in his career, Morrice used his sketches as aide-mémoires: in very few brushstrokes he noted the music kiosk, the tree, the Lévis shore. The grass in the park was perhaps still yellow, so he left the wood bare, and its color complement the green foliage. He gave slightly more importance to the center zone, the river and the little boat.
The composition of the canvas follows the sketch, but the result is totally different. Unlike the strict horizontal compositions of the 1909 (“View towards Lévis from Quebec”) or of the many “Quai des Grands Augustins, Paris” that Morrice had painted since 1904, here the main lines are slightly askew, especially the Lévis shore. This dynamism is heightened by the strong but very bright colors: unlike Morrice’s usual “atmospheric” landscapes, this canvas is full of life and joy, somewhat reminiscent of the paintings of the Fauves that Morrice had seen at the 1905 Salon d’Automne.
But Morrice could not totally renounce his Anglo Saxon Protestant temperament: the foliage is artificially extended over the whole length of the canvas, keeping the top of the composition on the surface, and it looks as if he had used a ruler to draw the railing and the sidewalk. The kiosk, which in reality is located on the grass and not on the terrace, is also brought into line... and was perhaps based on a photo to get the details. This is expected for a composition where the overall effect is more important than the parts. The result is beautiful, a ray of sunshine in Morrice’s Canadian output.
Copyright © Lucie Dorais, 2014