Canadian & Inuit Fine Art

May 27, 2019

LOT 68

Lot 68

GORDON MCKINLEY WEBBER

GORDON MCKINLEY WEBBER
Lot 68 Details
GORDON MCKINLEY WEBBER

CABINS AMONG THE TREES, 1933

oil on board
signed and dated "Toronto 1933" on the reverse
18 ins x 22.5 ins; 45.7 cms x 57.2 cms

Estimate $9,000-$12,000

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

Lot Report

Additional Images
GORDON MCKINLEY WEBBER
  • GORDON MCKINLEY WEBBER
  • GORDON MCKINLEY WEBBER
Provenance:

Family of the Artist, Kitchener, ON

Literature:

Bruce Anderson, Gordon McKinley Webber: Memories of an Artist, Designer and Teacher, McGill School of Architecture, Montreal, 1996, page 9.

Note:

In the 1930s Gordon Webber (1909-1965) had the opportunity to study under the tutelage of Arthur Lismer. This influence is readily apparent in the bold colours of Cabins Among the Trees, an excellent early example of Webber’s particular eye for nuance and painterly dynamism. Probably painted during a long period of respite in Georgian Bay after a leg injury, Cabins is an effusive synthesis of vision, with nature and the built environment blended into one cohesive whole. Nestled in the crook of a treeline are several wood cabins, half-obscured by bright greenery lapping at their side. Devoid of windows or doors, there is a distinct lack of human scale; the houses seem almost like something grown rather than constructed, a product of the forest. A short ladder, fat stumps and logs in the foreground betray this fantasy: this is a human environment, built with purpose. There is however no overt sense of urgency or indignity, and soft glowing sunlight fuses everything together in a peaceful, dreamy atmosphere.

This fusion is held in place by the palpable wind which can be heard in the sweeping, amorphous trees and thin film of smoke dripping out of a chimney: the gusts are felt in the liquid play of colour bending across the canvas, almost dissolving the cottages into the trees in one turbulent flow. This beautifully rendered early work is indicative of Webber’s anticipatory interest in modernism, and pre-figures the artist’s later turn to abstraction after studying under an exiled Lazslo Maholy-Nagy at the New Bauhaus in the late 1930s.

CONDITION DETAILS

For condition information please contact the specialist.

LOT 68
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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.