Lot #5

Rita Letendre
Sans titre, 1972

acrylic on board
7.5 x 15 in ( 19.1 x 38.1 cm )

Auction Estimate: $7,000.00$5,000.00 - $7,000.00

Price Realized $9,075.00
Sale date: May 28th 2025

Provenance:
Collection of the Artist
Galerie Simon Blais, Montreal
Private Collection
Literature:
"ICYMI: Remembering Rita Letendre" [online publication], The Art Gallery of Ontario, 24 November 2021, accessed 1 April 2025
Rita Letendre’s artistic journey began in Montreal, shaped by the influence of Paul-Émile Borduas and the Automatiste movement. She is celebrated for her striking and expressive style, which challenges traditional notions of colour, light, and space. Using a variety of tools—including paintbrushes, airbrushes, palette knives, and even her hands—Letendre captures the essence of life in her work. The artist fluctuated between gestural and hard-edge abstraction. The sharp wedges or arrows that cut across the image plane are characteristic of her work from the decade. As Letendre stated, “The clean shape started gradually in 1964 from the simplification that was already present in the murals. At that time, I had started doing a series of black and white wedges, the wedge that became more and more arrows. Then at one moment I made lots of lines near the arrow to create a feeling of vibration, that must vibrate into space, the eternal space...that vibration of a space that moves...these arrows are moving through space. I wanted, by the speed of it, to create vibration around.”

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Rita Letendre
(1928 - 2021) RCA

Canadian painter, muralist, and printmaker Rita Letendre was born in Drummondville, Quebec, in 1928. She is of Iroquois descent. Letendre and her parents moved to Montreal in 1941. She settled in Toronto in 1963. In part, Letendre is self-taught but she studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Montreal for year and a half. While in school she was introduced to the Automatistes due to pamphlets announcing the locations of their new paintings.

Encouraged by Borduas, Mosseau, and Ferron’s art, Letendre began exploring similar motifs in her paintings and began exhibiting with the group from 1952-55. In 1955 she exhibited in “Espace 1955” at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. Sharing a studio with fellow Automatiste painter and sculptor, Ulysse Comtois, Letendre became the subject of an article by the Weekend Magazine on non-objective Montreal-based painters. Then, in 1959, Letendre was included in the Third Biennial Exhibition of Canadian Art. In the following year the National Gallery of Canada included Letendre in their Non-Figurative Artists of Montreal exhibit that traveled throughout Canada. In 1962, Letendre received a travelling grant from the Canada Council and traveled to Paris, Italy, Israel, Spain, Belgium, and Germany.

Using a variety of techniques and media such as brush, spatula, pastel, silkscreen, and airbrush, Letendre was a leading member of the colourist movement. Exhibited in over sixty-five solo exhibitions, Letendre’s work can be described in three distinct periods. Her first period, known as the Montreal years, was inspired by her first meeting with Borduas and was a rich exploration of self-discovery. Letendre’s second period was inspired by Russian-born sculptor Kosso Eloul, who later became her husband. Her final period was rooted in mourning and love.

Letendre’s works vary in size from grand murals that are sixty feet by sixty feet in size to small projects on silkscreen. These works are collected throughout the North American continent by governments and public and private galleries and organizations. Letendre’s work has been exhibited in Europe, Israel, Japan, and throughout North America in New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Detroit, Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver.

Literature Sources:
"A Dictionary of Canadian Artists, Volume II”, compiled by Colin S. MacDonald, Canadian Paperbacks Publishing Ltd, Ottawa, 1979
Roumanes, Jacques-Bernard. “Rita Letendre: Le tableau ivre.” Vie des Arts 45, 183, 2001
Andersen, Marguerite. “Rita Letendre: Énergie et luminosité. L’art du féminin, 12 2004

We extend our thanks to Danie Klein, York University graduate student in art history, for writing and contributing this artist biography.