The Hollywood effect: Maud Lewis and other painters who got a bump from the movies - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:04 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
EntertainmentFeature

The Hollywood effect: Maud Lewis and other painters who got a bump from the movies

Maud Lewis' exuberant art regularly turns up at Canadian auctions. But the high-profile new film Maudie has sparked a wave of fresh interest in the beloved Nova Scotia folk artist's oeuvre. Call it the Hollywood effect.

From Maudie to Big Eyes to The Shining, pop culture depictions can introduce painters to new audiences

Sally Hawkins in the film Maudie, which has sparked fresh interest in the art of Maud Lewis. (Duncan Deyoung/Mongrel Media)

Maud Lewis's exuberant art regularly turns up at Canadian auctions. But the new,high-profile film Maudie has sparked a wave of fresh interest in the beloved Nova Scotia folk artist's oeuvre.Call it the Hollywood effect.

"When somebody sees a painting sell for six figures in the news, there isn't always an appreciation of the importance of the work culturally," noted Rob Cowley, president of Consignor Canadian Fine Art.

"Anytime you have a situation like this, where pop culture has come into play, it provides a link to the public," he explained. "It makes art a lot more approachable, to be able to have that background."

Here are fourrecent cases of painters getting a pop culture boost.

MaudLewis in the Maudiespotlight

Toronto-based Consignor typically sees between five and eight Lewis works turn up for auction each year, but interest this spring has been unprecedented.

"We moved Three Black Cats maybe her best known image to the main floor and it's incredible how many people come in, just make a beeline there first and start having a discussion about her, about the movie and instantly recognizing the work and getting excited about it," Cowley said.

These three Maud Lewis paintings -- (clockwise from left) Three Black Cats, Children Walking in the Snow and Winter Sleighing Scene -- will be sold by Consignor Canadian Fine Art in Toronto as part of its spring auction on May 25. (Consignor Canadian Fine Art)

Lewis's engaging life story a self-taught artist who, despite severe rheumatoid arthritis and poverty, created a vast amount of uplifting work hasalways drawn people in.

"She was an individual who didn't have formal art training. She didn't go to Europe to learn to be an artist. She didn't exhibit with other artists.... She had so many challenges and lived in this tiny space. Many people could have found depressing aspects to that life.Meanwhile, she painted these incredibly joyful works of art," Cowley said.

A petite artist is shown with a piece of her art work in front of a colourful house.
Maud Lewis is seen in this file photo posing with one of her paintings in front of her Nova Scotia home. (Bob Brooks/Art Gallery of Nova Scotia)

Maudie,a blockbuster in Atlantic Canada, arrives amid growing values for Lewis's work, currently offered for upwards of $7,000 double the estimates a decade ago.

Thesales record for a Maud Lewis work at auction had been$22,000 (paid for TheFamily Outingin 2009 at a BonhamsCanada auction), but an Ontario thrift store find that wassold as part of a charity auctionwentfor $45,000 on Friday night.

Portrait of Eddie Barnes and Ed Murphy, Lobster Fisherman, Bay View, Nova Scotiawas auctioned off by the Mennonite Central Committee Ontario and sold for nearly three times the price at which it was appraised. It was originally valued at approximately $16,000.

This Maud Lewis painting, found in an Ontario thrift shop, sold for nearly three times its estimated value at auction last week. (MCC Ontario)


MargaretKeaneseesBig Eyes boost

In a similar vein, there's been a resurgence for MargaretKeanesince the release of Tim Burton's 2014 biographical drama Big Eyes.The American artist rose to fame in the1950sand1960sfor painting "doe-eyed waifs", which her then-husband WalterKeanetook credit for. A court case ultimately confirmed that she was in fact the true creator.

Margaret and Walter Keane rose to fame in the 1950s and 1960s for their big-eyed paintings, which were later fully attributed to Margaret. (Bill Ray/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)

Following the movie, the market for Keane'swork which some critics have dismissed as kitsch began gaining strength,Cowleysaid. Prior toBig Eyes, Keanepaintings sold for $2,000 to $3,000 USor sometimes went unsold at auction. Now, her paintings can fetch between $5,000 to $10,000.

Like Lewis and her folk art landscapes,Keane'sworks depict a genre in this case portraiture considered appealing to and more approachable by the public. An artist'svalue definitely can get a boost"when you add that kind of attention, that kind of biography in film, to the artist's history," Cowley said.


LawrenHarris-championSteveMartin

For the visual arts, there's always a struggle to dispel the perception of stuffiness many people continue to have with art, art galleries and auction houses,Cowley said.

So when big biographical films are released or major art exhibitions open, "there's a humanity that's added to the artists that helps tremendously."

Actor, comedian, writer and musician Steve Martin focused renewed attention to Group of Seven founder Lawren Harris with his exhibition The Idea of North. (Craig Boyko/Art Gallery of Ontario/Canadian Press)

Steve Martin's recent LawrenHarris exhibit The Idea of Northsparked a flood of articles reinvestigating the artist's life. For many Canadians who might have known the name of the Group of Seven founder but little else his work then becomes more approachable, Cowley said.

Buzz about the Martin-curated show, which hit Los Angeles and Boston before arriving in Toronto, helped stoke widespread interest in Harris and was likely a factor when one of the canvases included in the exhibition blasted past estimates and became the most expensive Canadian artwork ever sold at auction last fall.


Alex ColvilleinThe Shining (plus Moonrise Kingdom and more)

The Art Gallery of Ontario's 2015 Alex Colville retrospective which also travelled to the National Gallery of Canada featured a fascinating thread that delighted art fans and cineastes alike: that the Canadian artist's work served as an inspiration for films, including Stanley Kubrick's The Shining and Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom, and more.

Incorporating video and panels, part of the well-attended show explored Kubrick'sinsertion of four Colville works including his famed work Horse and Train into key scenes of his classic horror film.

Meanwhile, Anderson somewhat recreatedColville's To Prince Edward Island for one scene of his nostalgic Moonrise Kingdom andcreators includingwriters Ann-Marie MacDonald andAlice Munro,filmmakerSarahPolleyand singer-songwriter Bruce Cockburnhave allbeen inspired by the East Coast artist.

"We still see people coming in and talking about that [Colville] show" and the Kubrick connection when they see his artwork, Cowleysaid.

The Art Gallery of Ontario's recent Alex Colville retrospective included a section discussing pop culture works inspired by his art. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Whether it's Van Halen using William Kurelek'sThe Maze to cover its 1981 Fair Warning album to Breaking Badcharacters debatingthe Georgia O'Keeffepainting My Last Door, the intersection of pop culture and the visual arts can be a valuable gateway for people to learn more about art.

After all, "everybody knows The Scream, the Mona Lisa, Warhol's style of portraiture, Picasso's style," Cowley said.

"When there are exhibitions of those major artworks or artists, people flock to them,not only because they're famous individuals, but also because they've had this support through other media."