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Lawren Harris painting Mountain Forms sells for record $11.21M at auction

A mountainscape painting by Group of Seven founder Lawren Harris has become the most expensive artwork ever to sell at a Canadian auction.

Group of Seven founder's work is now the most expensive Canadian artwork ever sold at auction

Mountain Forms, an iconic 1926 Rocky Mountain canvas by Group of Seven founder Lawren Harris, was recently part of The Idea of North, Steve Martin's show celebrating the art of Lawren Harris. (Heffel Fine Art Auction House)

A mountainscape painting by Group of Seven founder Lawren Harris has become the most expensive artwork ever tosell at a Canadian auction.

Mountain Forms, a renowned1926 paintingof Alberta's MountIshbelin theSawbackRange of the Rocky Mountains inBanff National Park,sold for $9.5 million at theHeffelFine Art Auction House in Toronto Wednesday night.

Including the 18 per cent buyer's premium, which comes out of the winning bidder's pocket andgoes to the auction house,the total price was $11.21 million.

"It deserves to be the record Canadianartwork at auction worldwide," auction house president David Heffeltold CBC News shortly after the sale.

"It was a great moment for Canadian art, for Canadians and forLawrenHarris."

The buyer behind the winning bid, which came from inside the room, remains anonymous.

'One giant leap for the Canadian art market:' Watch Mountain Forms set a new auction record

8 years ago
Duration 2:15
On Nov. 23, 2016, the Lawren Harris canvas Mountain Forms was sold by Heffel Fine Art Auction House for a hammer price of $9.5 million. The overall price, with commission, was $11.21 million, more than double the previous record-holder.

The 1.5-metretall, 1.8-metre wide canvas vastly surpassed its expected sale price of between$3 million and $5 million. It replaces Paul Kane'sScene in the Northwestas the record holder. That painting was purchased in 2002 by art lover and media baron Ken Thomsonfor a total of $5,062,000.

Mountain Formshails from thecollection of Imperial Oil, which has reduced its art holdings in recent years. As part of astreamlining of its corporate collection, the company has donated worksto Canadian galleries and given proceeds from some art auctions to the United Way and its partners.

Itwas most recently on loan toThe Idea of North: The Paintings of Lawren Harris, an exhibition co-curated by comedian and art lover Steve Martin.

Pulling together some of Harris's best known works from top museums, galleriesand private collections across Canada, the showdebuted at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles before travelling to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto.

There is a growing international interest in Canadian art,British art historian IanDejardinsaid earlierthis week. He hasco-curatedseveral successful and high-profile exhibitions ofCanadian art in London in recent years.

Harris, in particular, "is such a powerful and attractive artist. He is someone who is ripe for appreciation abroad, particularly in the States, where they have the comparison with someone like Georgia O'Keeffe" an "international superstar"whose work recently packed crowds into the Tate Modern, he told CBC News.

"Lawren Harris deserves to be seen in the same breath, I think, as that."

Over hiscareer, Harris himself was a champion of Canadian artists, Heffel noted, so it is fitting that one of his works is now the record-holder.

And about that anonymous buyer?

"I feel optimistic that the work won't be hidden in a back, private closet somewhere. I'm optimistic that we'll live another day to see Mountain Forms," he said.

New record set for Lawren Harris painting

8 years ago
Duration 2:38
A mountainscape painting by the Group of Seven founder has become the most expensive artwork ever to sell at a Canadian auction, Deana Sumanac-Johnson reports

Additional Harris works fetched lofty prices during the auction as well, includingMountain SketchLXIII($2 million) andMountRobsonfrom BergLake($1.888 million).

The evening also saw records set forartists rangingfrom A.J.Casson(Country Crisis,$1.534 million)toTakaoTanabe(Inside Passage 2/87:GrenvilleChannel, $188,800). Notable highlights included:

  • Tom Thomson,Sleet Storm, sold for $1.534 million.
  • Bill Reid,KillerWhale (Chief of the Undersea World),sold for$1.18 million.
  • Emily Carr,Alert Bay (with Welcome Figure),sold for$1.062million.
  • James WilsonMarrice,The Woodpile,Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupr,sold for$1.18 million.
  • WilliamKurelek,Portrait of theArtistas a Young Man,sold for$531,000.

With files from Jessica Wong and Nigel Hunt