Canadian Fine Art

September 17, 2020

LOT 15

Lot 15

KENNETH CAMPBELL LOCHHEAD, R.C.A.

KENNETH CAMPBELL LOCHHEAD, R.C.A.
Lot 15 Details
KENNETH CAMPBELL LOCHHEAD, R.C.A.

THE BURIAL, 1953

oil on canvas
signed and dated "feb/53" to stretcher; also titled to exhibition label on the reverse
16 ins x 24 ins; 61 cms x 61 cms

Estimate $3,000-$4,000

Realised: $16,800
Price Includes Buyer's Premium ?

Lot Report

Additional Images
KENNETH CAMPBELL LOCHHEAD, R.C.A.
  • KENNETH CAMPBELL LOCHHEAD, R.C.A.
  • KENNETH CAMPBELL LOCHHEAD, R.C.A.
Provenance:

Private Collection, Alberta

Literature:

Ted Fraser, Kenneth Lochhead: Garden of Light [1948 to 2002]. Regina: MacKenzie Art Gallery, 2005, unpaginated

Exhibited:

Saskatchewan Arts Board Fifth Annual Saskatchewan Art Exhibition - The Saskatchewan Arts Board, Norman MacKenzie Art Gallery, 1 March 1954.
Kenneth Lochhead: Garden of Light, The MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina, Saskatchewan,
January 29-May 23, 2005.

Note:

A gathering of people keep vigil around a coffin in an otherwise bare prairie landscape. The clothespeg-like figures and geometric shapes that surround them exemplify the modernism that Kenneth Lochhead, as a member of The Regina Five, is known for developing. Lochhead painted a number of other communal rituals of daily life on the prairies in this style, including The Bonspiel, 1954 (The Saskatchewan Arts Board Permanent Collection), The Review, 1953 (Private Collection), and The Dignitary, 1953 (National Gallery of Canada).

The artist studied Italian masters from Piero della Francesca to surrealist Giorgio de Chirico while studying at the Barnes Foundation as well as during his travels to Europe as a student. The fixed vanishing point shadows and the gathering of people within an architectural composition is a nod to these artists.

This is a seminal painting for Lochhead, embodying a key moment of modernism and surrealism in Canada. It was included in his first major retrospective in 2005, titled “Kenneth Lochhead: Garden of Light.” Curator Ted Fraser wrote of the painting in the exhibition’s catalogue, “The Burial communicates how Saskatchewan is born of the travail of nineteenth-century homesteaders who built sod huts, towns, and province on community goodwill.”1

1Ted Fraser, Kenneth Lochhead: Garden of Light [1948 to 2002]. Regina: MacKenzie Art Gallery, 2005. unpaginated

CONDITION DETAILS

For condition information please contact the specialist.

LOT 15
×

About Condition Ratings

  • 5 Stars: Excellent - No discernable damage, flaws or imperfections
  • 4 Stars: Very Good - Minor flaws or imperfections visible only under close inspection using specialised instruments or black light
  • 3 Stars: Good - Minor flaws visible upon inspection under standard lighting
  • 2 Stars: Fair - Exhibits flaws or damage that may draw the eye under standard lighting
  • 1 Star: Poor - Flaws or damage immediately apparent under standard lighting (examples: missing components, rips, broken glass, damaged surfaces, etc.)

Note: Condition ratings and condition details are the subjective opinions of our specialists and should be used as a guide only. Waddington’s uses due care when preparing condition details, however, our staff are not professional restorers or conservators. Condition details and reports are not warranties and each lot is sold “as is” in accordance with the buyer’s terms and conditions of sale. In all cases the prospective purchaser is responsible for inspecting the property themselves prior to placing a bid.