Artwork by William Kurelek,  Our First Three Homes in Canada
Thumbnail of Artwork by William Kurelek,  Our First Three Homes in Canada Thumbnail of Artwork by William Kurelek,  Our First Three Homes in Canada Thumbnail of Artwork by William Kurelek,  Our First Three Homes in Canada

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Cowley Abbott
326 Dundas St West
Toronto ON M5T 1G5
Ph. 1(416)479-9703

Lot #10

William Kurelek
Our First Three Homes in Canada

oil on board
signed with monogram and dated 1966 lower right; titled and dated 1966 on the reverse; inscribed “For Paul” on the gallery label on the reverse
17 x 21.25 in ( 43.2 x 54 cm )

Estimated: $70,000.00$50,000.00 - $70,000.00

Provenance:
Isaacs Gallery, Toronto
Private Collection, Toronto
By descent to the present Private Collection, Toronto
Literature:
William Kurelek, "The Ukrainian Woman Pioneer in Canada", Toronto, 1968, unpaginated
This painting was owned by an executive of the Ukrainian Women’s Association of Canada. In 1965 this group commissioned Kurelek to paint the series, "The Ukrainian Pioneer Woman in Canada". Twenty paintings were completed in the years leading up to the 1967 Canadian Centennial. The series served to mark the 40th anniversary of the Association, the 75th anniversary of Ukrainian immigration to Canada as well as displayed at the Ukrainian Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal. Although the Association was unable in the end to purchase the entire suite of works, Kurelek writes that they “gave me a lot of moral support.”

The series, "Ukrainian Pioneer Woman in Canada" includes three individual paintings, each depicting a home Kurelek’s Ukrainian relatives had built in Alberta between 1905 and 1925. The first features a primitive "boorday"—which Kurelek describes as a “covered over hole in the ground”—that would come to serve as the root cellar when the second, more permanent, structure resembling the village houses they had known in Ukraine had been built. The third house, framed in “the general style of prairie architecture at the time” and having “no Ukrainian features whatever” represented, for Kurelek’s family, a culmination of their immigrant experience. "Our First Three Homes in Canada" was completed while Kurelek was working on the "Ukrainian Pioneer Woman in Canada", but it does not appear in the final series— suggesting it was a gift or private commission.

Here, all three houses appear within a single picture, with the first two rendered as historical photographs, "trompe l’oeil" elements that overlay the main image of the third house.

We extend our thanks to Andrew Kear, Canadian art historian and Head of Collections, Exhibitions and Programs at Museum London for contributing the preceding essay. Andrew is the past Chief Curator and Curator of Canadian art at the Winnipeg Art Gallery, a Curator of the 2011/2012 national travelling exhibition "William Kurelek: The Messenger" and author of the Art Canada Institute’s "William Kurelek: Life & Work", available at www.aci-iac.ca.
Sale Date: May 30th 2024

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Cowley Abbott
326 Dundas St West
Toronto ON M5T 1G5
Ph. 1(416)479-9703


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William Kurelek
(1927 - 1977) RCA

Born on a farm near Willingdon, Alberta in 1927, William Kurelek created paintings that explored the reality of farm life during the Depression, with a focus on Ukrainian experiences in Canada. Kurelek’s mother’s family settled in Canada during one of the first waves of Ukrainian immigration in 1899 before the painter’s father arrived in Alberta from Western Ukraine during the second major wave to the province in 1923. In 1934, Kurelek’s family moved to Manitoba, near Winnipeg, due to falling grain prices and a fire that destroyed their home. Upon moving to Manitoba, Kurelek began attending school at the Victoria Public School.

Influenced by the apprehension surrounding the Depression, World War I, and the instability of farming, Kurelek focused on his studies. However, his father did not approve. While Kurelek’s father valued physical labor on the farm, Kurelek concentrated on school and drawing, which caused tension in his household. As a child, Kurelek covered his room in drawings from literature, dreams, and hallucinations. At school, Kurelek’s classmates were enthralled by his stories and drawings.

In 1943, Kurelek and his brother attended Isaac Newton High School in Winnipeg. While in Winnipeg, he frequented Ukrainian cultural classes offered by St. Mary the Protectress. In 1946, Kurelek enrolled in the University of Manitoba studying Latin, English, and history. While in university, Kurelek’s mental health spiraled, which he later self-identified as depersonalization.

After university, in 1948, Kurelek’s family relocated to a farm near Hamilton, Ontario. The next fall, in 1949, Kurelek began studying at the Ontario College of Art working towards a career in commercial advertising. While in school he was uninterested in the competitiveness and emphasis on earning high grades. So, he decided to study with David Alfaro Siqueiros in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. During his hitchhike to Mexico, Kurelek experienced his first mystical experience while sleeping in the Arizona desert. In this vision, a robed figure asked him to look after his sheep. Upon his arrival to Mexico, Kurelek learned that Siqueiros had departed, and the program was under new direction by Sterling Dickinson. Dickinson’s program was more informal and allowed Kurelek to become aware of social issues and develop his belief system.

Kurelek returned to Canada in 1951 and traveled to England in 1952 where he was admitted into a psychiatric treatment center at London’s Maudsley Hospital. The doctors noted the severity of his illness as well as his artistic talent. After his discharge, Kurelek traveled throughout Europe to view works by Northern Renaissance painters, such as Jan van Eyck and Hieronymus Bosh. In 1953, Kurelek was readmitted into Maudsley, then transferred to Netherne Hospital in Surrey, which had a cutting-edge therapy program. He continued to paint during this time. In early 1955, Kurelek was discharged and returned to London where he worked at an art framing studio, apprenticing with Frederick Pollock.

“Stephen Franklin in ’Weekend Magazine’ described his years in England as follows, ‘In seven years Kurelek found both happiness and sadness in London. His painstaking fool-the-eye paintings of pound notes and other objects found their way into three Royal Academy summer shows, but he was increasingly bothered by eye trouble for which there was no physical cause. He plumbed the depth of emotional despair, contemplated suicide, and wound up in hospital for more than a year. It was here that he began his conversion – from boyhood membership in the Orthodox Church and subsequent atheism – to Catholicism which has deeply affected his life since.’

It was there that he drew many self-portraits and scenes of farm life from his youth. He also developed his unique style of outlining the drawing with a ballpoint pen, using coloured pencils for texture and adding details in pen. Careful examination of his drawings reveals images full of realism with minute details of things like cots, clothes and even insects. Under the pen of William Kurelek, prairie farm scenes and landscapes came to life.”

Kurelek permanently returned to Canada in 1959. Later that year he met Avrom Isaacs, of Isaacs Gallery, who invited him to work in his gallery’s frame shop and hosted his first solo exhibition in 1960. In 1962, Kurelek married Jean Andrews and they relocated to the Beaches area in Toronto. Following the Cuban Missile Crisis, he began painting in a “fire and brimstone” style and constructed a fallout shelter in his basement, which eventually became his studio. He visited Ukraine in 1970 and 1977 and during this period he took a multicultural approach to his art. After his second trip to Ukraine he was admitted to St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto and soon passed away from cancer.

Literature Sources:
Andrew Kear, “William Kurelek: Life and Work”, Art Canada Institute, Toronto, 2017 (https://aci-iac.ca/art-books/william-kurelek)