Driven to Abstraction: Canadian Abstract Art and the Turbulent '50s

199232 min 25 secFilm: Documentary

Direction: George Mully

Production: Anne NewlandsGeorge Mully

Produced by the National Gallery of Canada.

This title is an acquisition.

Using newsreel footage from the fifties, and archival interviews with artists, this video production juxtaposes major events of the time with comments from Canadian artists speaking about their explorations into the field of abstraction. We hear the views of Montréal artists associated with automatism, and of those opposed to it. Artists from Toronto, the Prairies and Vancouver also discuss various aspects of abstract art in the fifties in Canada. Among the artists heard from in this film are: Fernand Leduc, Paul-Émile Borduas, Jack Bush, Marcelle Ferron, Jack Shadbolt, Gordon Smith, Jean-Paul Riopelle, Harold Town, Rita Letendre, Paterson Ewen, Ron Bloore and Takyo Tanobe.

Availability


Subject categories


  • Visual Arts > Contemporary ArtMovement AutomatistePortraitsQuébec

Credits


director
George Mully
editing
George Mully
producer
Anne Newlands
George Mully