Artwork by Alexander Young Jackson,  Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, 1959-1960
Thumbnail of Artwork by Alexander Young Jackson,  Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, 1959-1960 Thumbnail of Artwork by Alexander Young Jackson,  Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, 1959-1960 Thumbnail of Artwork by Alexander Young Jackson,  Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, 1959-1960 Thumbnail of Artwork by Alexander Young Jackson,  Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, 1959-1960

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

Lot #24

A.Y. Jackson
Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, 1959-1960

oil on canvas
signed lower left; titled on a gallery label on the reverse

The following is inscribed on a label on the reverse next to attached maps:
"From a sketch made in August 1959 during a trip to Port Radium with Dr. M.H. Haycock of the Mines and Technical Surveys Dept. Port Radium is located at the site of Labine's Radium discovery and the original Eldorado Mine of Eldorado Mining & Refining Ltd. The general area is shown on the maps. Dr. Jackson made his sketch from a location on the southern point of Gossan Island MR 5824 looking out in Echo Bay across the mouth of the southwestern arm.

The painting was presented to the AHQ Officers Mess on 27 May 1960 by the officers of Corps of RCEME. The presentation was made by Colonel R.A. Campbell OBE CD, Director of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering to Major General J.D.B. Smith CBE DSO CD, who received it on behalf of the AHQ Officers Mess. Dr. A.Y. Jackson was also present for the presentation."
25.25 x 32.25 in ( 64.1 x 81.9 cm )

Auction Estimate: $150,000.00$100,000.00 - $150,000.00

Provenance:
Presented by Colonel R.A. Campbell to Major General J.D.B. Smith
and AHQ Officers Mess, 27 May 1960
Galerie Claude Lafitte, Montreal
Private Collection, Vancouver
Heffel, auction, Vancouver, 22 May 2008, lot 107
Private Collection, Mississauga
Literature:
Naomi Jackson Groves, "A.Y.'s Canada", 1968, pages 208, 212, 214
Dennis Reid, "Alberta Rhythm: The Later Work of A.Y. Jackson", Toronto, 1982, page 28
An avid outdoorsman, A.Y. Jackson explored Canada's most remote areas. Travelling by boat or canoe through hundreds of lakes and rivers provided the artist with fresh landscapes to both sketch and investigate while camping with companions throughout his career.

A.Y. Jackson’s first trip to Great Bear Lake in the Northwest Territories took place in 1938. Gilbert Adelard LaBine, the prospector who first discovered pitchblende, arranged for Jackson to be flown to his Eldorado Mine at Port Radium on Great Bear Lake, where the artist spent six weeks exploring and painting the surrounding countryside. Ten years earlier Jackson had been as far north as Yellowknife and expressed a yearning to see the country further north. Ever the intrepid explorer, Jackson remarked, “I guess I am a compass, always heading north. I really do belong to the caribou country, not to the cow country.”

Great Bear Lake is one of the most prominent geographic features of northern Canada. It has a total area of 31,150 square kilometres, with five arms radiating from the central body. It is the eighth largest and most northerly major lake in the world. This region, which so intrigued Jackson, was formed during the last retreat of the polar ice cap about ten thousand years ago and is filled with innumerable lakes, rocky hills, patches of spruce and small birch trees. Thrilled by the vast scale of the country, Jackson wrote to his niece, Naomi Jackson Groves, “The skies are far away, and everything that takes place does it over a thousand square miles.” This raw and vital northern land so enthralled Jackson that he returned in 1949, 1950, 1951 and 1959. In 1949, he landed in Port Radium with artist Maurice Haycock, and in 1950, at Port Radium again, he explored the Barrens and camped near Teshierpi Mountain, in the Kitikmeot region. In 1951, from Great Bear Lake he travelled with John Rennie farther northeast along the Coppermine River to the September Mountains and west to Hunter Bay. After landing in Port Radium in 1959, he explored Hornby Bay and Atnick Lake, then went on to Lac Rouvière in the Barrens.

During his 1959 trip to Great Bear Lake, Jackson kept an informal diary and wrote letters detailing his experiences. In a letter dated 28 August, he described an event from the 24th:

“We left the buildings of the Eldorado boat yard and, that afternoon, were forced to seek shelter in a small bay behind a point. The bay was bordered by steep cliffs of rock, which reflected the sound of our voices, and for that reason, we called it Echo Bay.”

The name Echo Bay was originally applied by Canadian geologists Dr. James Mackintosh Bell and Dr. Charles Camsell to the innermost bay at what is now Port Radium and not to the neighbouring fiord-like bay, as it applies today.

Throughout his five trips to Great Bear Lake, Jackson often collaborated with geologists and mining engineers, sharing in their fascination with the land. In his travels around Canada, Jackson sought to capture the very essence of the land wherever he went, and in this impressive canvas he captures the wild, open land stretching off into a great distance. Dennis Reid asserts that the “journeys to Great Bear Lake and the Barren Lands resulted in some of the finest sketches of Jackson’s career. Viewed as a group, they are unrivalled. The primeval nature of the landscape appealed to him, with its vigorous mid-summer life clinging tenaciously to the margins of existence. Nothing extraneous survives. Fundamental values seem clear.” The rugged landscape of Great Bear Lake enthralled Jackson. Located on the boundary between boreal forest and tundra, the artist was surrounded by rocky hills, open patches of spruce and no farmlands. Dr. Bell, the geologist with whom Jackson had met in 1928, noted in his research of the area that the striking colours at the entrance to Echo Bay resulted from greenstone with calcspar containing chalcopyrite. He also observed that the lake’s shores were stained with cobalt bloom and green from copper. This suggests that the vivid hues seen in "Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake" were not merely an artistic interpretation but an authentic reflection of the natural landscape. Not only has Jackson recorded a region rich in geological delights, but an area historically known for its mining activities and industry, reflecting the abundance of natural resources, stunning scenery and innovation of the people.
Sale Date: May 28th 2025

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


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Alexander Young Jackson
(1882 - 1974) Group of Seven, Canadian Group of Painters, OSA, RCA

Born in Montreal, Alexander Young Jackson left school at the age of twelve and began work at a Montreal printing firm. In 1906, he undertook art studies at the Art Institute in Chicago. The following year he enrolled at the Académie Julian where he studied under Jean Paul Laurens for six months, then he travelled to Italy with others where they visited galleries in Rome, Florence and Venice. They returned to France and Jackson went to the village of Episy with a fellow student named Porter with whom he had lived in Paris. Jackson found much to paint at Episy: old farms, rolling country, the canal where barges were towed by mules, and for the first time (in France) he lived with people close to the land.

He left France when his funds were low and returned to Canada in 1910 where the “clear crisp air and sharp shadows” of Sweetsburg, Quebec, became the subject of his canvas “Edge of the Maple Wood”. During this period his painting was strongly influenced by the Impressionists. Then the work of Canadian artists Cullen and Morrice led him further in the discoveries of snow and other elements of Canadian subject matter which were to become an integral part of his work throughout his life. After his return to Canada, Jackson took up residence in Montreal and made many sketching trips to the surrounding countryside. While at Emileville he received a letter from a J.E.H. MacDonald of Toronto who wanted to purchase his “Edge of the Maple Wood” on behalf of a third party, Lawren Harris. Jackson sold the picture and later met MacDonald in Toronto. In Toronto he also met, through MacDonald, Arthur Lismer, Frederick Varley and other members of the Arts and Letters Club who were employed by the Grip Engraving Company as commercial artists. Jackson later went to Georgian Bay to sketch and was visited there by Dr. James MacCallum, a friend of Lawren Harris. MacCallum, who had a summer home at the Bay, offered Jackson a place to work in the ‘Studio Building’ which MacCallum and Lawren Harris were having built for Canadian artists in Toronto. In the meantime Jackson was invited to stay at MacCallum’s summer home. Jackson’s production was good; he did many sketches and a number of canvases, one being the “Maple in the Pine Woods” which was later to bring a storm of criticism at a Group of Seven exhibition.

On his return to Toronto, Jackson stayed at Lawren Harris’ studio in Toronto until the Studio Building was completed. There one day he was introduced to Tom Thomson who had accompanied Dr. MacCallum on a visit. Thomson was also an employee of the Grip Engraving Company. The two moved into the Studio Building in January 1914 and shared a studio. Thomson had soon inspired Jackson to visit Algonquin Park in February and March of 1914. Jackson also sketched that year with J.E.H. MacDonald and J.W. Beatty. In 1915, Jackson enlisted as a private in the 60th Battalion and after being wounded, returned later to the front as Lieutenant with Canadian War Records. As a war artist he created one of the finest collections of war paintings our nation possesses.

In 1919 he went to Algoma with J.E.H. MacDonald, Lawren Harris and Franz Johnston, making use of a railway box car as a studio which Harris had arranged. During that year, Jackson became a full member of the Royal Canadian Academy. On May 7th, 1920, the first exhibition of the Group of Seven opened at the Art Gallery of Toronto. The Group continued to exhibit until 1931. Each exhibition of the Group was met with great protest. In July of 1927 Jackson and Dr. Frederick Banting went north on the steamer ‘Beothic’ which had been chartered by the government to deliver supplies to the RCMP posts and to carry relief constables to the posts. They sketched at Pond Inlet, Devon Island, Ellesmere Island and other arctic locations. Jackson’s arctic sketches were exhibited at the Art Gallery of Toronto.

Jackson's great sense of adventure carried him from the east coast across Canada to the Rocky Mountains of the west. He made regular sketching trips to Quebec every spring and travelled to the far regions of Canada during the summer, including the Canadian Arctic. In the fall he would return to the Studio Building in Toronto (where he lived until 1955), spending the winters painting canvases. He continued this active lifestyle until he was in his eighties.

Source: "A Dictionary of Canadian Artists, Volume II”, compiled by Colin S. MacDonald, Canadian Paperbacks Publishing Ltd, Ottawa, 1979