Harold Elliott (artist) explained

Harold Elliott
Birth Name:Harold Herbert Elliott
Birth Date:1890 3, df=y
Birth Place:Killarney, Manitoba
Death Place:Burnaby, British Columbia
Field:Painter
Movement:Fauvism, Surrealism, Expressionism

Harold Herbert Elliott (1890 - 1968) was a Canadian artist.

Biography

The parents of Harold Hebert Elliott were pioneers in Killarney, Manitoba, and Elliott was the eldest of ten children.[1] Before arriving in British Columbia in 1920,[2] Elliot was variously a homesteader in Fielding, Saskatchewan,[3] a school-teacher, a prospector and a poet. He ran a pickle-manufacturing business for 10 years. His first marriage had resulted in two children, and in 1927 Elliott married again, to Elizabeth West Henderson.[1] He began painting in 1948, as recommended by his doctor following a heart failure. Elliott was often described as eccentric.[4] In order to evoke the creative spirit, he liked to wear long gypsy-like robes.[5] He sometimes adopted personae of his own creation, or imaginatively emulated idols such as Rembrandt, Turner, and Emily Carr. His asking price for his works was extremely high, and he completely refused to part with some pieces. Elliott claimed to have painted over 5000 pictures. His paintings are often signed "Van Volkingburgh", after his mother's family name." In 1964, three of his paintings were featured in New Talents B.C. at the Vancouver Art Gallery.[6] [7] 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.[1]

Style

Most often constructed on cardboard, his paintings are generally small.[7] 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.[8] He preferred to concentrate on one colour at a time.[6] His landscapes typically have wandering, vaguely human figures,[8] with an overall sense of approaching menace.[7] A melancholy mood is commonly established by the sun never really breaking through the clouds. Circular shapes frequently recur.[7] Another motif is triangulation, whereby a single figure observes two others from a distance.[1] Later paintings have faceless figures with large blank eyes.[7] Doris Shadbolt remarked that Elliott "is a kind of visionary painter. His work is completely apart from the historical stream of art,"[6] a summation echoed by David Watmough.[9] His paintings have an overall "unlearned" aspect, anticipating later trends.[7]

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Collections

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Wilkins, 6 September 1972.
  2. Web site: Sim. Gary. Sim Publishing. Elliott, Harold Herbert. British Columbia Artists. 2 April 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210403140026/http://sim-publishing.com/bca/bcaart-e.htm. 3 April 2021. live.
  3. Untitled (obituary), 18 Sep 1968.
  4. News: Kyle. Flora. Art: City Artist's Painting Chosen for Contest. The Vancouver Sun. 1 November 1963. 2 April 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210403140537/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/74819462/harold-herbert-elliott-seattle/. 3 April 2021. live. .
  5. "Artist Harold Elliott of way-out fame dies", 30 Aug 1968.
  6. Stoffman, 28 May 1964.
  7. Haraldsson, Winter 1987.
  8. Dolman, 6 April 1963.
  9. Watmough, 9 Jan 1965.
  10. Web site: Works of: Harold Elliott. Seattle Art Museum. https://web.archive.org/web/20210403140728/https://art.seattleartmuseum.org/people/1362/harold-elliott;jsessionid=8074BD1C0E29762358E50F0234922A42/objects. 3 April 2021. live.