Showing posts with label Wrinch Mary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wrinch Mary. Show all posts
Friday, 16 November 2012
More from Mary Wrinch
I posted on the Canadian artist Mary Wrinch two years ago, and and although I have nothing much to add, I did come across Green and gold (above) some while back on Bill Carl's site and think it's about time I put this irresistible little linocut up on the blog. If in common with so much Canadian printmaking of the period, style wins out over subject, I can still forgive her. The blues and golds would be enough to win me over, but really the surface textures convince me that she really could come up with the goods. I don't know how much it is, but I think it's still for sale.
Also from Bill Carl, this other one, in similar vein, but a more conventional landscape, just about. For blue trees were a convention by the thirties though I'm not so sure about pink ones. This one may also be from Bill Carl. The final print isn't but is still up for sale on ebay in Canada. Not in a style I admire nearly half as much, for US$650, it might be yours. My thanks as ever to William P Carl Fine Prints.
Wednesday, 3 November 2010
Mary Wrinch (Canadian, 1878 - 1969)

Here is another artist born in the 1870s who began her career as a painter then turned to relief printmaking. Mary Wrinch was born in Essex, England, presumably emigrating to Canada before training at the Central School in Toronto. (She also put in time at the Grosvenor Life School in London and the Art Students League, New York). The painting below dates to this early part of her career. By the late-ish twenties, she had taken up linocut.

She clearly took care to master the technique. Her first compositions were all monochrome and like the one below either landscapes or flower studies, some rather symbolist and undemanding for the date. Not that I would turn this one down. It's a finely balance little piece and more focussed than the hollyhocks from the garden of the governor's house in Quebec.

Perhaps I'm not being entirely fair to Wrinch here because I think Royds is the better artist. Her tulips are mortal; for all Royd's artistry, we are in the living, dying world with her. Wrinch is coherent but doesn't move that far beyond design.

She did no paintings after the twenties and produced 44 colour linocuts between 1930 and 1944. Unlike her British contemporaries her market clearly held up. No wonder those tulips are so confident! And I can tell you it makes a refreshing change to be able to finally write about a woman artist who is documented and had a long career. Hooray for Canada!
She did no paintings after the twenties and produced 44 colour linocuts between 1930 and 1944. Unlike her British contemporaries her market clearly held up. No wonder those tulips are so confident! And I can tell you it makes a refreshing change to be able to finally write about a woman artist who is documented and had a long career. Hooray for Canada!
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