Ann MacIntosh Duff explained

Ann MacIntosh Duff
Birth Date:14 July 1925
Birth Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Training:Central Technical School, Toronto (1944–1946) with Peter Haworth; Queen`s University, Kingston, summers studied with André Biéler and Caven Atkins
Known For:Painting
Awards:Member in 1973, Royal Canadian Academy; Queen's Jubilee Medal (1977)

Ann MacIntosh Duff (14 July 1925 – 3 December 2022) was a Canadian artist known for her watercolor paintings.[1]

Biography

MacIntosh Duff was born in Toronto on 14 July 1925, the daughter of John MacIntosh and Constance Hamilton Duff.[2] The painter and graphic artist Walter R. Duff was her father`s cousin.[3] She worked at one of two places - at her home in Toronto or at her Georgian Bay cottage at Pointe au Baril, Ontario.[4] She painted from memory, landscapes of the mind, as she called them.[4]

In 1951, MacIntosh Duff became a member of the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour (CSPWC) and remained an active member for thirty years. In 1959, she began working with Douglas Duncan at the Picture Loan Society until Duncan’s death in 1968. She was also an active member of the Ontario Society of Artists (she was elected in 1961) and the Canadian Society of Graphic Art (elected 1963) and the Royal Canadian Academy (1973). In 2007, the Tom Thomson Art Gallery in Owen Sound held a retrospective of MacIntosh Duff’s work titled To Love and To Cherish. In 2023, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection held a posthumous show of her work.[5]

Maria Tippett describes Duff's 1895 painting Woman By the Sea as "half Primitive, half Symbolist", noting that the painting contains a "sense of monumentality and timelessness".[6]

Her work is included in the collections of the National Gallery of Canada[1] and the Royal Collection, as part of the Royal Collection Project.[7] In 1977, she was awarded the Queen`s Jubilee Medal; in 1984, she received an Honorary Award from the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour. She was represented in Toronto by the Nicholas Metivier Gallery.

MacIntosh Duff died at her home in Toronto on 3 December 2022, at the age of 97.[8]

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ann MacIntosh Duff. www.gallery.ca. 1 December 2020.
  2. Book: Sleeman . Elizabeth . The International Who's Who of Women 2002 . 2001 . Psychology Press . 978-1-85743-122-3 . 152 . en.
  3. Web site: Kear . Andrew . Solitude's Paradox: An introduction to the life and work of Ann MacIntosh Duff, Ann MacIntosh Duff: To Love and To Cherish . website-metiviergallery.artlogic.net . Metivier Gallery, Toronto . 4 December 2020.
  4. Web site: Pelot . Anne . Ann MacIntosh Duff at Nicholas Metivier Gallery, 2016 . artoronto.ca . artoronto.ca . 2 December 2020.
  5. Web site: Exhibitions . mcmichael.com . McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg . 20 October 2023.
  6. Tippett, Maria, By a Lady: Celebrating Three Centuries of Art by Canadian Women, Viking, Toronto, 1992 p. 34
  7. Web site: Duff . Ann MacIntosh Duff . Garages in Winter . www.rct.uk . Royal Collection Project . https://web.archive.org/web/20190515045420/https://www.rct.uk/collection/926171/garages-in-winter . 1 December 2020. 15 May 2019 .
  8. Web site: Ann MacIntosh Duff . Nécrologie Canada . 6 January 2023 . 9 December 2022.