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GROUP OF SEVEN



FRANZ JOHNSTON

Franz Johnston The Fire Ranger

" THE FIRE RANGER "
Franz Johnston

Giclee Canvas 19" x 24" $89
Giclee Canvas 24" x 30" $135
Giclee Canvas 30" x 38" $165
Giclee Canvas 38" x 48" $289
Giclee Canvas 48" x 60" $395


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Franz Johnston Fireflies

" FIREFLIES "
Franz Johnston

Giclee Arches Paper 17.6" x 13" $175
Giclee Arches Paper 27.1" x 20" $335

 

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Gallery Canvas Stretching

The canvas prices above are for new unstretched canvas. We can stretch the canvas
so that it is ready to hang in North America and can stretch the canvas on a 1.5" deep stretcher bar,
called " Gallery Stretching ", or the more " Traditional Stretching " where it is .75" on the side.
Building a stretcher frame & stretching the canvas over so that it is tight like a guitar string
and ready to hang is $59 for smaller canvas to $99 for the larger size.

All pieces are also available on Art Paper.

 

Frank Johnston (June 19, 1888 – July 19, 1949) was a Canadian artist associated with the Group of Seven.
He was born in Toronto in 1888. Although his official association with the Group of Seven was brief, his friendship with the artists dated back over a much longer period. As a commercial artist at Grip Ltd., he was involved with the circle of young artists working there whose ideas about Canadian art led to the formation of The Group. When he joined the firm around 1908, his fellow Grip workers included J. E. H. Macdonald and Tom Thomson, and later Arthur Lismer and Franklin Carmichael signed on. Through those men and as a member of the newly founded Arts and Letters Club, he met other artists, including Lawren Harris - all painters with new and exciting ambitions for Canadian art.

Johnston had much in common with these artists. Like them, in the years before World War I he used his spare time to pursue landscape painting, through sketching trips around Toronto and farther north to Bon Echo near Algonquin Park and to Hearst, north of Lake Superior -- a source of inspiration for him. An eager participant in Group activities, Johnston went on all the Algoma trips except the last. Johnston did not use the techniques of Harris and MacDonald but, employing tempera rather than oil paint, he searched out the pattern and texture of his subject. The effect is more linear and decorative than that of his fellow artists, yet Johnston's paintings show the viewer the subtle colour relationships and interplay of forms in the foliage, rocks, and sky.

Johnston exhibited with The Group of Seven only once, in their first show at the Art Gallery of Toronto (now the Art Gallery of Ontario) in May 1920. A man of staggering energy and enthusiasm, Johnston had an amazing rate of production. In the 1919 Algoma show he contributed sixty works - more than any other artist. A few months later, he extended his independence even more, having a large one-man show of 200 paintings at the T. Eaton Company Galleries. In the fall of 1921, Johnston left Toronto to accept the position as principal of the Winnipeg School of Art. There he held the largest show ever seen in that city. He had been slowly moving away from the Group movement, and now the break was complete.

In 1924, he announced his official
resignation, claiming that he had no disagreement with the group, only that he wanted to go his own way with regards to exhibitions. This was in keeping with the character of this energetic, ambitious and strong-willed man. When Johnston left The group, he turned more to working for department store art galleries. Unfortunately, his work lost his earlier fresh vitality and became more decorative. He was a superb craftsman, but was mainly concerned with decorative effects, which he constantly sought out.

Johnston's style became increasingly realistic throughout his life, evincing a particular fascination for the qualities of light reflected from snow. This theme recurred in later works, in large narrative paintings of the 1930s and 1940's as well as more intimate examinations of a river valley, the bright blue of the water bending between snow-laden banks. His subjects range from the pastoral countryside of the Wyebridge, Ontario|Wyebridge area, northern Quebec, and the Northwest Territories. he had begun in the 1920s to hold regular solo exhibitions and his paintings found a great following among the public. Unlike many Canadian artists, Johnston was able to achieve considerable financial success in his own lifetime.
He taught at the Ontario College of Art during the 1920s. In 1927, he changed his name to Franz Johnston.
He died in Toronto in 1949.

 

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T1W 2B2

 

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FRANZ JOHNSTON