Norman Yates Explained

Norman Yates
Birth Name:Edward Norman Yates
Birth Date:23 July 1923
Birth Place:Calgary, Alberta
Death Place:Victoria, BC
Spouse:Whynona Yates (1926-1998)
Education:Ontario College of Art (graduated 1951)
Known For:artist, educator, arts advocate

Norman Yates (September 23, 1923 February 09, 2014) was a painter in washes of colour of panoramic abstract and semi-abstract paintings that he called "landspaces". His themes were space and energy.[1] In 2023, Patricia Bovey said that his landscapes are "flowing, evocative, ephemeral and always changing, reflecting the intangibility of the light, skies, and atmospheric effects". She added that his paintings are significant works in the annals of Western Canadian Art.[2]

Career

Yates was born in Calgary and grew up in Regina. After four years of service as a radar technician in the Royal Canadian Air Force during the Second World War, he attended the Ontario College of Art, graduating in 1951. [3] After 3 years in Toronto, in 1954, he was hired to teach in the University of Alberta's department of arts and design in Edmonton where he remained until he retired in 1989.

In 1972, Yates and his family moved to a large treed tract of land near Tomahawk, 96 kilometres west of Edmonton where he experienced an overwhelming sense of space. At much the same time, he discovered the work of J. M. W. Turner and he studied it in depth. Both the new place for his painting and Turner influenced his subsequent paintings.

During the 1970s, Yates served as an arts advocate and social activist, establishing the Alberta branch of the Canadian Society for Education Through Art, chairing the Alberta Foundation for the Arts, serving on the Western Canada Art Council and trying to prevent the demolition of older homes in his neighborhood. But having decided his activism was useless, in 1989, Yates and his wife moved to Victoria, BC.[3]

Selected exhibitions

Honours and awards

Selected public collections

Commissions

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Collection . hermis.alberta.ca . AFA . 14 January 2024.
  2. Book: Bovey . Patricia E.. Western Voices in Canadian Art . 2023 . U of Manitoba Press . Winnipeg . 137ff. 14 January 2024.
  3. Web site: Brennan . Brian . Article . www.gallerieswest.ca . Galleries West Magazine, 2004 . 14 January 2024.
  4. Web site: Exhibitions . archive.org . 14 January 2024.
  5. Web site: Exhibitions . e-artexte.ca . artexte . 14 January 2024.
  6. Book: Baker . Suzanne Devonshire . Artists of Alberta . 1980 . U of Alberta . Edmonton . 21 . 978-0-88864-030-7 . 14 January 2024.
  7. Web site: Collection . www.gallery.ca . National Gallery of Canada . 14 January 2024.
  8. Web site: Collection . www.ualberta.ca . U Alberta . 14 January 2024.