Artwork by George Heriot,  Dance of Indian Women

George Heriot
Dance of Indian Women

watercolour over graphite on paper laid down on card
signed, initialed and titled in the lower margin
8.5 x 12.75 in ( 21.6 x 32.4 cm ) ( sheet )

Auction Estimate: $1,500.00$1,000.00 - $1,500.00

Price Realized $18,000.00
Sale date: November 27th 2024

Provenance:
Private Collection
Collection of Art Windsor-Essex
Exhibited:
"George Heriot, Painter of the Canadas", Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston; travelling to the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; McCord Museum, Montreal; Art Gallery of Windsor; the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, 12 November 1978-14 July 1979, no. 90
Literature:
Gerald E. Finley, "George Heriot, Painter of the Canadas", Kingston, 1978, no. 90, reproduced page 46 as "Indian Dance", page 47
Born in Haddington, Scotland, George Heriot studied at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich, England before arriving in Quebec in 1791. Heriot served as a Deputy Post-Master General of British North America from 1800-1816. Heriot ran an ambitious program to improve mail facilities in Upper and Lower Canada and across Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, recording pictorial details while he travelled. As Gerald E. Finley shares, Heriot produced “a series of watercolours documenting Canadian life: its cultures, its animals and its insects. Heriot was especially attracted to the society of Indians and he began to create a number of complex compositions.”

Cowley Abbott is pleased to work with Art Windsor-Essex (AWE) to support their new endowment fund by offering this work at auction this fall season. This fund was established to support the care and diversification of the collection at AWE.

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George Heriot
(1759-1839)

George Heriot, artist, public official, writer (b at Haddington, Scot 1759; d at London, Eng 1839). His chief importance to Canada resides in his art. He developed his drawing skills at an early age, encouraged by the Scottish Maecenas, Sir James Grant of Grant. In 1777 Heriot sailed for the West Indies, where he drew and composed A Descriptive Poem, written in the West Indies (1781). On his return to Britain (in 1781), he attended the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, receiving instructions in topographical drawing from the illustrious drawing master, Paul Sandby, from whom he likely learned the principles of the Picturesque, an aesthetic system that determined his approach both to descriptive writing and to art. In 1792 he arrived in Canada employed as a clerk in the Quebec Ordinance Department; in 1799 he was appointed head of the Canadian post office. During his long Canadian sojourn (1792-1816) he returned to Britain twice on leaves of absence - in 1796 and in 1806. On the first return visit he seems to have been deeply impressed by the simplicity and monumentality of recent British watercolours and prints. It was also on this visit that his watercolours were accepted for exhibition at the Royal Academy.

Though talented as an administrator, Heriot lacked the diplomatic skills that would have led to his promotion and to more power in the colony. However, he often found refuge from the tensions of his duties in travelling, writing, and painting. He wrote The History of Canada from its first discovery (1804) and Travels through the Canadas (1807), this latter work is illustrated with mainly aquatint plates of landscape, native and habitant subjects based on his own watercolour designs. In 1816 he resigned from the post office (owing to increasing difficulties with the colonial administration) and returned to Britain.