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WATERCOLOR - WORK 17.25 X 14.25 INCHES - FRAME 26.85 X 23.75 INCHES - GALLERY 1 LABEL ON BACK.
ARTIST: TOM DE VANY FORRESTALL, Born in Middleton, Nova Scotia, he grew up there and in Dartmouth. His early interest in art was stimulated by books on art. When his family moved to Dartmouth, he attended Saturday Morning Classes at the NSCA in Halifax. Following high school, he began art studies at Mount Allison University, Sackville, N.B. (1954), under Lawren P. Harris and Alex Colville, and graduated in 1958 with his B.F.A degree. Under these top Canadian artists, he developed his natural abilities and emerged as a skilful painter who was awaiting an opportunity to develop his ideas. He married fellow student Natalie LeBlanc of Atholville, N.B. Having been a scholarship student, he was awarded a Canada Council grant for study and travel in Europe. When he and Natalie returned to Canada, they settled in Fredericton, where he worked for a year as assistant curator of the Beaverbrook Art Gallery; then as an editorial cartoonist for the “Fredericton Daily Gleaner”, and designer for UNB Press. One of Forrestall’s patrons, Brigadier Michael Wardell, made it possible for him to buy a converted building, formerly an old bakery. There, he conducted art classes one night a week.
With the income now from his jobs and his teaching, he was able to devote more of his time to painting. It was not long before he adopted the tried and true medium of egg tempera as well as acrylics. By 1963, he was experimenting with panels of shapes other than the traditional rectangle. In 1965, he held his first solo shows at Roberts Gallery, Toronto.
During this period, he painted remarkable scenes which were described by artist and teacher, Dr. Donald C. MacKay as follows, “His paintings, many inspired by the rural tranquility of the Maritimes, frequently reflect nostalgic qualities often inherent in their subjects, yet emphasized so that he shares his intimate experience with the viewer. His preferred medium, egg tempera, is ideally suitable for this expression and the diverse forms of frames are designed to encourage participation and thus enhance this special relationship.”
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