Saturday, March 19, 2022
The last day of winter 2022
Friday, March 18, 2022
Morgan's Department Store
Photo taken between 1930 and 1940; this is Morgan's Department Store before they added an extension to the rear of the store; this original building was called Colonial House |
A winter day in the 1940s, Morgan's seen from the entrance area of Birk's jewelry store |
Furniture department display |
Cosmetic department |
A fashion show |
Looks like the basement; now the basement leads to the Metro |
Fashion department |
Santa's visit |
Morgan's, 1940s |
A fabulous Christmas display on the store's exterior, seen from Philips Square |
Wednesday, March 16, 2022
The Beaver Hall Artists
Sunday, March 13, 2022
1920s Modernism in Montreal exhibit, MMFA
I'll go back and identify the artists of these paintings, all were exhibited at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts' 1920s Modernism in Montreal exhibit in 2015. For instance, the first painting below is of St. Patrick's Church from the rear of the studio of the Beaver Hall artists.
This is St. James Cathedral, renamed Marie, Reine de la Monde around 1950 which was the year of Mary; it's just a few blocks west of Beaver Hall Hill |
St. James Cathedral, Marie, Reine de la Monde |
This Seventh Day Adventist Church is located in Upper Westmount |
One of the two towers at the College de Montreal; on the north side of Sherbrooke Street West across from Fort Avenue |
Of course, this is where we began, looking down on the entrance of Morgan's Department Store on the corner of Union and Ste. Catherine Street West |
Saturday, March 12, 2022
As Canadians we endure
The young Morse's name is Endeavour, like the drama on television. Another possible name, for Canadians, would be Endurance, that is what we do best considering our long winters. Endurance is also the name of Shackleton's ship that sank in the Antarctica in 1915, and the ship itself has endured, frozen in time by the frigid water in which it sank. We Canadians endure while others surrender, including Americans who never tire of telling the world how great they are and that you can be anything, literally anything, if you put your mind to it. We know this isn't true, but it's good old fashioned American get up and go and will power over all obstacles. Good for them! If you have enough money and resources you can possibly achieve what poorer people can`t achieve, but it is also pride, hubris, and self-satisfaction. I think the moral fibre and vision of life comes from the very earth and geography on which we walk, and anyone coming to Canada soon drops their old ways and learns how to endure. I remember a book in the SGWU stacks, on Robert Lowell, titled Everything to be Endured, but that is also life. Call me Endurance, like other Canadians, I have survived.
Meanwhile, a snow storm is blowing up from Texas or a cold spell is blowing south from the Arctic; these photographs of an earlier snowstorm were taken in February 2022.
Thursday, March 10, 2022
A white garden/ a garden under snow
There isn't really a lot to commend winter, I suppose beauty is in the eye of the beholder but winter drags on too long and, like a house guest after two weeks, can overstay its welcome. The first snowfall in November or December is serene, quiet, lovely to see the snow lined branches of trees, and even a big snowfall (let's say 20 cm) isn't all that bad, not if you're at home, don't have to go out, and can enjoy quiet time during the falling snow. What is not fun, pleasant, happy, serene, meditative is how our winters drag on into late March and sometimes even early April; four of five months of winter is just too much. A three month winter, from first snowfall to the snow melting, is about all many of us can stand.
Here is my Canadian cottage garden in early March this year. I gave up even walking back there two months ago, previously I would go for a walk and then, arriving home, I'd check out the backyard. We miss the diversity of summer, the colours of flowers, the many plants, birds singing, insects, and then we surrender all of this to winter. "Mon pays c'est l'hiver" sang Gilles Vigneault, but it's not my country.
Monday, March 7, 2022
More on Darrell Morrisey
It isn't much but at least Darrell Morrisey (one of the "forgotten" Beaver Hall artists) now has some recognition; people know that she existed and that she was an artist. To this end, I wrote an essay on her and she was included in the Museum's 1920s Modernism in Montreal exhibit--in fact, this was a major exhibition at the Museum--and she was included in the catalogue published for the exhibition. Not much, but better than nothing. . .
From the MMFA's 2015 exhibition of the Beaver Hall artists |
Bottom left, one of two extant paintings by Darrell Morrisey |
Friday, March 4, 2022
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Here we are in October 2015 at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts on Sherbrooke Street West in Montreal, we're visiting an exhibition of the Beaver Hall artists; this building is where the Art Association of Montreal relocated in 1913. Banners for the 1920s Modernism in Montreal exhibit hang on the outside of the original building on the north side of the street; a newer building (the Jean-Paul Desmarais Pavilion, that opened in 1991) is located directly across the street; next door to the original museum building is the Marc Bougie Pavilion, that opened in 2010; the Marc Bougie Pavilion used to be the Erskine and American (Presbyterian) United Church until it was repurposed as an exhibition space for Canadian Art and a concert hall.
For many years I have felt that the Museum is one of the great attractions to visiting Montreal and to enjoying living here.
The Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion for Peace |
The Marc Bougie Pavilion, note the addition of exhibition space at the rear of the building; this was originally the Erskine and American (Presbyterian) United Church |
Interior of the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion for Peace |
Interior of the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion for Peace |