Beyond Wilderness: The Group of Seven, Canadian Identity and Contemporary Art

John O'Brian & Peter White

Language: English

Published: Jul 15, 2007

Description:

'The great purpose of landscape art is to make us at home in our own country' was the nationalist maxim motivating the Group of Seven's artistic project. The empty landscape paintings of the Group played a significant role in the nationalization of nature in Canada, particularly in the development of ideas about northernness, wilderness, and identity. In this book, John O'Brian and Peter White pick up where the Group of Seven left off. They demonstrate that since the 1960s a growing body of both art and critical writing has looked 'beyond wilderness' to re-imagine landscape in a world of vastly altered political, technological, and environmental circumstances. By emphasizing social relationships, changing identity politics, and issues of colonial power and dispossession contemporary artists have produced landscape art that explores what was absent in the work of their predecessors. "Beyond Wilderness" expands the public understanding of Canadian landscape representation, tracing debates about the place of landscape in Canadian art and the national imagination through the twentieth century to the present. Critical writings from both contemporary and historically significant curators, historians, feminists, media theorists, and cultural critics and exactingly reproduced artworks by contemporary and historical artists are brought together in productive dialogue. "Beyond Wilderness" explains why landscape art in Canada had to be reinvented, and what forms the reinvention took.

Review

"A substantive, generation-bridging collection ... [that] masterfully configures the foundations of a highly compelling revisionist Canadian art history." Jennifer Fisher, York University, Ontario

About the Author

John O'Brian teaches art history at the University of British Columbia. His books include Ruthless Hedonism: The American Reception of Matisse, Clement Greenberg: The Collected Essays and Criticism, and David Milne and the Modern Tradition of Painting.