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Art Canadian

National Gallery of Canada

Ideas, Art, Architecture

by (author) Douglas Ord

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
May 2003
Category
Canadian, Public, Commercial & Industrial
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773570832
    Publish Date
    May 2003
    List Price
    $70.00

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Description

Ord looks at the gallery's historical and intellectual context - from 1910 when Eric Brown became the gallery's founding director, through Jean Sutherland Boggs, to Shirley Thomson - shedding light on its acquisitions, government policy towards the arts, and the public's deep-rooted suspicion of avant-garde art. In showing how Canadian art came to be housed in a building whose architectural and ideological sources include Gothic cathedrals, Islamic mosques, Egyptian temples, St Peter's Basilica, and the squared-stone facades of the Holy City of Jerusalem, The National Gallery of Canada insightfully explores the relationship of Canada's art and its National Gallery to the project of the Canadian nation state.

About the author

Douglas Ord, author of Tommy’s Farm and Oscar and Jeannie, spent his early years in Iroquois, Ontario, which was destroyed by a flood of biblical proportions when the St. Lawrence Seaway was built. As an anonymous escapee, he then lived in suburbs.

Douglas Ord's profile page

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