cover image Defiant Spirits: The Modernist Revolution of the Group of Seven

Defiant Spirits: The Modernist Revolution of the Group of Seven

Ross King. Douglas & McIntyre with the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, $24.95 (528p) ISBN 978-1-55365-882-5

Award-winning art historian King (The Judgment of Paris) recounts the evolution of the Algonquin School in this biography of seven remarkable Canadian artists. On the eve of WWI, a small group of talented painters converged in the art department of the Toronto design firm, Grip Limited. While the firm had introduced the nation to Art Nouveau and metal engraving, its designers had loftier ambitions%E2%80%94to develop an artistic identity for Canada.%C2%A0Head Grip designer J.E.H. MacDonald found kindred spirits in Tom Thomson, Franklin Carmichael, A.Y. Jackson, Franz Johnston, Arthur Lismer, and Frederick Varley. The group's challenge%E2%80%94to capture with "%E2%80%98Canadian' eyes" the harsh landscape of the north on canvas%E2%80%94led to extensive exploration of Algonquin Provincial Park. In 1914, the seven gathered at the purpose-built Studio Building for Canadian Art, where they would hone their skills and their vision, resulting in their first group exhibition at the Art Gallery of Toronto in 1921. After a productive decade and mounting criticism that their work had begun to settle into clich%C3%A9s, the group finally disbanded in 1931. Their paintings reflected what fellow artist Emily Carr called the "naked soul." King's book does an excellent job of exploring the roles of these visionary individuals in the shaping of an artistic cultural identity. With 24 pages of color plates and 43 black and white photos (Oct.)