Bertram Richard Brooker
(1888 - 1955) Canadian Group of Painters, RCA
Previously Sold Works
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Delta Ice House
oil on canvas
signed lower right; titled and inscribed “Hart House ‘42” on the stretcher
24 x 30 ins ( 61 x 76.2 cms )
Auction Estimate: $25,000.00 - $35,000.00
Price Realized $82,600.00
Sale date: November 20th 2018
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Still Life (Variation No.3)
oil on board
signed lower right; titled and estate stamps on the reverse
11 x 14.25 ins ( 27.9 x 36.2 cms )
Auction Estimate: $12,000.00 - $16,000.00
Price Realized $24,000.00
Sale date: June 15th 2022
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Still Life with Apples and Glass
oil on board
signed lower right
11.5 x 15 ins ( 29.2 x 38.1 cms )
Auction Estimate: $9,000.00 - $12,000.00
Price Realized $20,400.00
Sale date: December 3rd 2020
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Tree Trunks
oil on board
signed lower left; titled, numbered 166 and marked with the Estate stamp on the reverse
11.5 x 15 ins ( 29.2 x 38.1 cms )
Auction Estimate: $4,000.00 - $6,000.00
Price Realized $12,980.00
Sale date: May 29th 2018
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Still Life with Top Hat, Stone Fragment, Glass Ball and Tumbler, 1931
oil on board
inscribed “Return to 107 Glenview Ave., Toronto” on the reverse
15.75 x 19.75 in ( 40 x 50.2 cm )
Auction Estimate: $10,000.00 - $15,000.00
Price Realized $8,400.00
Sale date: May 30th 2024
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Portrait of a Woman
oil on canvas
24 x 18 ins ( 61 x 45.7 cms )
Auction Estimate: $3,000.00 - $5,000.00
Price Realized $6,490.00
Sale date: May 29th 2018
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Oaks on Assiniboine
ink on paper
signed with initials lower right; titled and dated “August 14, 1929” in pencil in the lower margin beneath the mat; titled, dated and artist’s estate stamp on the reverse; titled and dated to a label on the reverse
8 x 8 ins ( 20.3 x 20.3 cms ) ( sight )
Auction Estimate: $1,000.00 - $1,500.00
Price Realized $1,920.00
Sale date: May 31st 2022
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Six Christmas Cards
six prints
- “Untitled Landscape with Church and Village” - typed inscription “from Rilla and Bertram Brooker at Christmas, 1945” on reverse, 6.75 x 4.5 ins [card];
- “Untitled (Snowy Tree Leaves)” - typed inscription ”Greetings from Rilla and Bertram Brooker Christmas, 1950” inside, 6.75 x 5 ins [card];
- “Untitled (Horse and Carriages)” - typed inscription “Greetings from Rill and Bertram Brooker Christmas, 1951” on reverse, 7.75 x 10 ins [card];
- “Untitled (Candles)” - typed inscription “Greetings from Rill and Bertram Brooker Christmas, 1952” inside, 7 x 5.5 ins [card];
- “Untitled (Cheers)” - lithograph and plastic, typed inscription “Best wishes for a cheery Christmastide - Rill and Bertram Brooker Christmas 1953” inside, 7.25 x 5.75 ins [card];
- “Untitled (Noel)” - typed inscription “Greetings from Rill and Bertram Brooker Christmas 1954”, 7.75 x 5 ins [card];
each matted; each unframed
x ins ( 0 x 0 cms )
Auction Estimate: $700.00 - $900.00
Price Realized $1,140.00
Sale date: August 23rd 2022
BERTRAM RICHARD BROOKER
Simply to Thy Cross I Cling
watercolour
titled, estate stamp and inscribed “First watercolour, ten years old “Simply to thy cross I cling” to a paper affixed to the reverse of the frame
7.25 x 6.25 ins ( 18.4 x 15.9 cms ) ( sheet )
Auction Estimate: $700.00 - $900.00
Price Realized $1,140.00
Sale date: August 23rd 2022
Consignments
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Bertram Brooker Biography
(1888 - 1955) Canadian Group of Painters, RCA
Born in 1888 in London, England, Bertram Brooker was one of Canada’s first abstract painters. Brooker attended school until age twelve when he went to work as a domestic servant at Fuller’s Dairy. Brooker had an early interest in art and music. His first painting was a watercolour from 1899 featuring exultant Christ. Unfortunately, this work does not survive. Brooker was a choirboy at the St. James Anglican Church in Croydon. In 1905, Brooker’s family immigrated to Portage la Prairie, Manitoba. Here, Brooker worked with his father at the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway.
In his early twenties, Brooker traveled to England and New York City. On this trip he probably encountered modern theatre and contemporary art, such as the first Post-Impressionist exhibition organized by Roger Fry in 1910. From 1911-14 he was active in the local theatre community and directed a play called Much Ado About Something. In 1914, Brooker became the editor of the Portage Review. He would later work as a designer, music and drama editor, and director for various newspapers in Winnipeg and Regina. In 1920, Brooker and his brother moved to Brandon, Manitoba, and opened a cinema in the Neepawa Opera House. Brooker wrote and sold several scripts about a detective, Lambert Chace, while in Brandon. Three of these films survive.
In 1921, Brooker moved to Toronto to work at the Globe and at Marketing. Three years later, Brooker purchased Marketing and became the publisher and editor. In 1927, Brooker sold the company back to its original owner. In 1929, Brooker began working at J.J. Gibbons Advertising Agency. He worked there until 1936 where he was hired at MacLaren Advertising, where he worked until 1955, and eventually became the Vice-President of the company.
While visiting a Presbyterian church in Dwight at the Lake of Bays in Ontario, Brooker experienced a moment of awakening and came to understand that the role of artists was to instruct society on getting in touch with their spiritual values. He began creating nonfigurative paintings in tempera that were inspired by his enlightenment at the church. The style adopted by Brooker was indebted to a group of English artists who were inspired by the Futurists known as the Vorticists, and Brooker used abstract shapes to suggest violence and movement. Painting in this way allowed Brooker to express the spirituality that he was trying to understand.
In 1923, Brooker met Lawren Harris and was sympathetic to the Group of Seven’s nationalist agenda, but he thought their view of the wilderness was too limited and that there were countless other ways for creating Canadian art. Both Harris and Brooker were interested in infusing spiritual values into paintings. Sponsored by Harris and Arthur Lismer in 1927, Brooker’s abstracts were given their first solo show at the Arts and Letters Club. Brooker’s radical paintings did not resonate with the viewers and was widely criticized. Until 1931, Brooker showed his art with the Group of Seven due to his compatibility with their aims.
Despite his artistic accomplishments, Brooker saw himself as a writer. However, Brooker continued to paint regularly and had an in-home studio. During the summer of 1929 Brooker met representational artist Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald. Inspired by FitzGerald and his own long-established passion for abstract art Brooker began expanding his style. It was at this time that he explored various genres, such as the nude and still lifes. Brooker never promoted his work to museums or dealers, and much of his work remained unsold during his lifetime.
Literature Source:
James King, “Bertram Brooker: Life & Work”, Art Canada Institute, Toronto, 2018 (https://aci-iac.ca/art-books/bertram-brooker)
We extend our thanks to Danie Klein, York University graduate student in art history, for writing and contributing this artist biography.