Rita Mount
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Rita Mount | |
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Born | 7 February 1885 Montreal, Canada |
Died | 22 January 1967 Montreal, Canada | (aged 81)
Education |
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Known for | Painter |
Rita Mount (7 February 1885 Montreal – 22 January 1967 in Montreal) was a Canadian painter.[1]
Biography
[edit]Rita Mount was born in Montreal in 1885. Her cousin was Georges Delfosse son of Mélaine Delfausse and Josephine Mount, 16 years older than her. He started at the National Institute of Fine Arts with Joseph Chabert and then at the Art Association of Montreal1 with William Brymner and Edmond Dyonnet. At the turn of the century, he was sufficiently known to establish in Montreal the Canadian Society of portraits and paintings. At the age of ten Rita Mount began her artistic studies. She was trained in drawing, workshop and motif, by her cousin who taught several students at the time, including Rodolphe Duguay and Narcisse Poirier. She distinguished herself during the summer classes offered by Maurice Cullen and won a two-year scholarship at the Art Association of Montreal, a private school and museum founded in 1860. Her classical training was complemented by studies and emancipatory stays abroad.
In 1910, at the age 25, Rita Mount studied at the Atelier Delécluze and at the International Circle of Fine Arts in Paris and at the Art Students League in New York with Frank DuMond (1865-1951). She also took landscape painting classes with John F. Carlson in Woodstock, New York. After graduating, she returned to Canada and opened a studio in Montreal.
In search of inspiring landscapes, she travelled, exploring towards the Pacific Coast (Banff in 1934, Victoria, Yellowstone Park and Wyoming in 1937) and then on the Atlantic side (Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, but also Gaspésie in which it stays several times). She gained notoriety for her marine paintings which were the subject of a solo exhibition at the Art Association in 1934.
She is an associate member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and the Independent Art Association.
Residing with her sister Marie Mount on Outremont Avenue, she died on 22 January 1967 at the Montreal General Hospital after a short illness. She is buried at the Côte-des-Neiges Cemetery in Montreal.
Exhibitions
[edit]At the age of 18, she regularly exhibited at the salons of the Art Association of Montreal and, beginning in 1910, at the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. In 1916-1917, she presented her works at the Bibliothèque Saint-Sulpice, with Claire Fauteux and Berthe Lemoine. In 1958, her works were shown in a three-woman exhibition alongside Irene Shaver and Vivian Walker.[2] Over sixty-years later the women's work was exhibited again in commemoration of International Women's Day at the marden Art Gallery, in Pointe-Claire Village, Montreal, Québec.[3]
Legacy
[edit]The works of Rita Mount are in the collections of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec[4] and the National Gallery of Canada. At her death in 1967, her sister entrusted her archives to the Bibliothèque nationale du Québec. This material, which also includes correspondence, is one of the few collections illustrating the career of a female artist-painter in Quebec.
References
[edit]- ^ Oliver, Bette W. (December 2005). "Moved by Love: Inspired Artists and Deviant Women in Eighteenth-Century France, by Mary D. Sheriff. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2004. xi, 303 pp". Canadian Journal of History. 40 (3): 502–504. doi:10.3138/cjh.40.3.502. ISSN 0008-4107.
- ^ "Mount, Rita". GALERIE D'ART DOUCE PASSION. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
- ^ "Gallery Events". mardenartgallery.com. March 8, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
- ^ "Mount, Rita".
External links
[edit]- "Canadian Women Artists History Initiative".
- https://www.klinkhoff.ca/artists/193-rita-mount%2C-a.r.c.a./
This article incorporates text available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license.