His friendship with Franklin Carmichael, an original member of the Group of Seven, proved to be the catalyst of Casson's career. Asked to become a member of the Group in 1926 to replace Frank Johnston who had resigned, Casson went on to become known as a painter of Ontario, as was Carmichael. He was able to document many of our rural settings and buildings, as well as his great study of the Ontario landscape with all of the riches that are found in his interpretive paintings of sharply defined colour and shape and contrast. Alfred Joseph Casson, born in Toronto, began to study art with J.S. Gordon at Hamilton Technical School and was apprenticed to a lithographer. Returned to Toronto in 1916 and studied with Harry Britton at the Ontario College of Art; also at the Central Technical School. Met Franklin Carmichael in 1919 and worked with him at Sampson-Mathews, as a commercial artist. He became a member of the Group of Seven in 1926 and a founding member of the Group of Painters, 1933. His paintings hang in every important private, corporate and public collection across our land, including the National Gallery of Canada.
Features:
Polystyrene molding with a mahogany finish
Glass-framed using pure white mats
Print is “Limited Edition”
Ready to hang
Dimensions :
Dimensions (L x W x H): 90.8 cm x 5.1 cm x 82.6 cm (35.8 in. x 2 in. x 32.5 in.)
Image dimensions (L x H): 45.7 cm x 55.9 cm (18 in. x 22 in.)