signed lower left; titled and dated “July 17, 1959” on the reverse
10.5 × 13.5 in (26.7 × 34.3 cm)
Auction Estimate:$20,000 - $30,000
Sale date:June 8, 2023
Price Realized
$18,000
(including Buyer's Premium)
Provenance
Joyner Fine Art, auction, Toronto, 18 May 1993, lot 186
Private Collection, Toronto
Literature
A.Y. Jackson, “A Painter’s Country: The Autobiography of A.Y. Jackson”, Toronto, 1958, page 57
Arthur Lismer, “A.Y. Jackson: Paintings, 1902-1953”, Toronto, 1953, page 4
Alexander Young Jackson particularly enjoyed his trips to Lake Superior. In “A Painter’s Country”, the artist recounted that, “the Algoma country was too opulent for Harris; he wanted something bare and stark, so at the conclusion of one of our sketching trips he and I went to the north shore of Lake Superior, a country much of which had been burnt over years before. New growth was slowly appearing. The C.P.R. main line follows the north shore of Lake Superior from Heron Bay westward to Port Arthur. I know of no more impressive scenery in Canada for the landscape painter. There is sublime order to it, the long curves of the beaches, the sweeping ranges of hills, and headlands that push out into the lake”. This work is a view from an inlet on the north shore which looks out to a number of small islands. There is an order to the scene and the picture is characterized by Jackson’s affinity for the simplified forms of the shore, headlands and islands beyond.
“At Pilot Harbour, Lake Superior” displays the hallmarks of A.Y. Jackson’s style. The artist experienced the land and revealed the inherent rhythm of the landscape. As fellow Group of Seven member, Arthur Lismer explained, “He paints neither as a poet, writer, archeologist, or historian, but as a painter with a purpose; to reveal, to say, ‘Here I was, here I saw and felt, and this is what I found.’ A Canadian with a few generations long in the land before him, he reveals deep affection for his native soil and a lyric quality of mood of time and space.” Jackson captured the raw vitality that makes the Canadian landscape distinct.