Artwork by James Wilson Morrice,  On the Terrace, circa 1898
Thumbnail of Artwork by James Wilson Morrice,  On the Terrace, circa 1898 Thumbnail of Artwork by James Wilson Morrice,  On the Terrace, circa 1898 Thumbnail of Artwork by James Wilson Morrice,  On the Terrace, circa 1898

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

Lot #1

James Wilson Morrice
On the Terrace, circa 1898

pencil
titled on a gallery label on the reverse
4 x 6.5 in ( 10.2 x 16.5 cm ) ( sheet )

Auction Estimate: $3,000.00$2,000.00 - $3,000.00

Provenance:
Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey Collection
Christie's, auction, London, 9 December 1960, lot 30
Private Collection
Paul Duval, Toronto
John Morris Gallery, Toronto
Private Collection, Toronto
Roberts Gallery, Toronto
Private Collection, Toronto
The celebrated Canadian Impressionist James Wilson Morrice captured the charm of urban life in his small, atmospheric sketches. This drawing depicts a lively terrace scene in Paris, where elegantly dressed figures sit and converse under their parasols in the sun. With his characteristic loose yet deliberate strokes, Morrice conveys the essence of the moment—the hum of conversation, the distant city beyond, and the interplay of light and shadow.

This drawing was originally part of a sketchbook in the estate of Canadian diplomat Vincent Massey. The sketchbook was used by Morrice around 1898 in Paris and the surrounding town Charenton, as well as in Saint-Malo, France.

We extend our thanks to Lucie Dorais, Canadian art historian and author of "J.W. Morrice" (1985), for assisting with the research on this artwork.
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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James Wilson Morrice
(1865 - 1924) RCA

Born in Montreal to a prominent family of textile merchants, Morrice spent most of his life abroad, much of it in Paris. He had gone there to enrol in the Academie Julian, the best-known of the private art schools that lured dozens of young Canadian artists to cross the ocean with the promise of technical proficiency and stylistic sophistication. Soon Morrice was studying with the Barbizon painter Henri Harpignies and looking intently at the pictures of the cutting-edge Nabis members. Affable and gregarious, Morrice was well liked in Paris among the local and emigre vanguard, notably his friends the great Henri Matisse and the influential American painter Robert Henri. He did well, showing in the most prestigious exhibitions of new art, including the Salons, and selling to discerning European collections of the highest rank. If he is remembered mostly in Canada today, it may be because Canadian collectors repatriated most of his pictures after his death, leaving Europeans with little to go on. He had been careful to maintain a reputation at home, showing here regularly and returning frequently for Christmas, which would explain why most of his Canadian pictures are winter scenes. Young Canadian artists held him in considerable esteem during his lifetime for his fearless modernism and his success in Europe. A stylistically hybrid artist, Morrice combined a lush and often dusky Post-Impressionist tone with nonchalant brushwork of a plumb assuredness, softening the blunt structures of his Fauvist friends. What results are paintings as complicated as they are straightforward and often redolent with suppressed emotion. Morrice tends to smallish pictures that draw you in, only to surprise you by their resolute diffidence. Irresistible and remote, his pictures ask for intimacy but keep their distance, like nostalgia, like longing. Morrice ran with a fast crowd of glittering cosmopolitans. Alcoholism got the better of him by the end of his fifties; his health ultimately failed while in North Africa where he had painted with Matisse and where he died at fifty-eight.

Source: National Gallery of Canada