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Emily Etc.
I recall visiting The Tate Gallery approximately 15 years ago, spending virtually all day wandering around the exhibits, concluding that there was nothing that appealed to me: classical or contemporary. Admittedly that was before I started to appreciate art as an aspect of design, when I moved into web development.
Judging from the publicity material for Emily Carr’s exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada, it was apparent that this would be a different from the standard ‘show and tell’, telling the life and inspirations of Emily through her work, influences and relationships with her peers. And indeed it was, although there’s little about her background, except where it affects the work she produced.
Prior to the start of her career, visits to the First Nations communities in British Columbia influenced her strongly. Her first paintings showed First Nations people and the use of totem poles in the context of their communities. She painted an awful lot of totem poles. But she also painted landscapes – mainly trees. A lot of trees. Financial problems caused her to abandon her career in 1913, and it wasn’t until the late 1920’s that she resumed work, having come in contact with The Group of Seven whilst participating in an exhibition of Canadian West Coast art.
This time around her work became more expressive, still driven by landscapes – yet more trees – but reflecting her emotions, religious beliefs and her views on the Canadian logging industries that were destroying forests. It’s this latter phase that I found more impressive because her works was not simply a reproduction of what she saw, instead there’s often a skewing of the subjects – the merging and twisting of trees and rock formations, stylistic reduction of landscapes, broader stroke-work and incredible shades and colours.
I cannot handle a full day visiting a gallery because all the exhibits merge into each other and you end up with a mush of memories. This visit to the National Gallery therefore included just one more section: Contemporary Art.
There’s a lot of rubbish in the Contemporary Art section. You can always tell rubbish art when there needs to be detailed intellectual descriptions behind a piece of work. One series of works were ink and paper based maps, showing altitudes, roads, railways and houses. Imaginary maps for ghost towns. As in towns for ghosts. Yup.
Worth seeing is the brief Rock and Roll section, including one huge sheet of paper on which were printed album titles at 6pt. There is also a lot of art reflecting the legacy of First Nations people. But the highlight was a full-size truck trailer. Because it’s not a truck trailer. Instead it’s a canvas, thumbtack and plastic reconstruction of a trailer, complete with assembly instructions under its base.

