Harold Elliott (artist)
Harold Herbert Elliott (1890–1968) was a Canadian artist. BiographyThe parents of Harold Hebert Elliott were pioneers in Killarney, Manitoba,[1] and Elliott was the eldest of ten children.[2] Before arriving in British Columbia in 1920,[3] Elliot was variously a homesteader in Fielding, Saskatchewan,[4] a school-teacher , a prospector and a poet.[1] He ran a pickle-manufacturing business for 10 years.[5] His first marriage had resulted in two children, and in 1927 Elliott married again, to Elizabeth West Henderson.[2] He began painting in 1948, as recommended by his doctor following a heart failure.[6] Elliott was often described as eccentric.[1][6][7] In order to evoke the creative spirit, he liked to wear long gypsy-like robes.[6][8] He sometimes adopted personae of his own creation, or imaginatively emulated idols such as Rembrandt, Turner, and Emily Carr.[6] His asking price for his works was extremely high, and he completely refused to part with some pieces.[6] Elliott claimed to have painted over 5000 pictures.[1] His paintings are often signed "Van Volkingburgh", after his mother's family name."[1] In 1964, three of his paintings were featured in New Talents B.C. at the Vancouver Art Gallery.[5][6] Elliott donated much of his art collection, and many of his own works, to the J. A. Victor David museum located in his hometown of Killarney.[2] StyleMost often constructed on cardboard, his paintings are generally small.[6] In Elliott's early work, he used materials like shoe polish and red ink, overlaid with thick varnish in order to achieve an effect like the old masters.[1] He preferred to concentrate on one colour at a time.[5] His landscapes typically have wandering, vaguely human figures,[1] with an overall sense of approaching menace.[6] A melancholy mood is commonly established by the sun never really breaking through the clouds.[9] Circular shapes frequently recur.[6] Another motif is triangulation, whereby a single figure observes two others from a distance.[2] Later paintings have faceless figures with large blank eyes.[6] Doris Shadbolt remarked that Elliott "is a kind of visionary painter. His work is completely apart from the historical stream of art,"[5] a summation echoed by David Watmough.[9] His paintings have an overall "unlearned" aspect, anticipating later trends.[6] Solo exhibitionsGroup exhibitions
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