Objects

Viewing Record 68 of 453
Previous Record  Next Record
Switch Views: Lightbox | Image List | List

Item Name: Painting
Title: Untitled (Morning After The Night Before)
Maker: William McCargar
Year: n.d.
Country: Canadian
Materials: watercolour, gouache, graphite pencil on paper
Measurements: overall: 20.6 cm x 30.3 cm
ID Number: PC87.10
Legal Status: PERMANENT COLLECTION


Extended Label Info: Bill McCargar was one of several self-taught folk artists working in Saskatchewan in the twentieth century. He often painted his subject matter from memory, drawing on his experiences from his career as a CP Rail-Station agent in small towns throughout the prairies. McCargar’s artwork has a theatrical feeling, often featuring a flat, nearly abstract landscape and disproportionately sized elements, creating a skewed sense of reality. In this watercolour painting, McCargar experiments further with abstraction, creating a surreal landscape with a collection of objects that the title suggests are memories one might have as part of a hangover, “the morning after the night before”. This artwork was one of several featured in a Dunlop exhibition in 2010 entitled, Cynthia Girard: “The Black Glove and the Peacock” in which Girard created new artworks inspired by folk art from the Dunlop collection. William Coulsen McCargar (1906 – 1987) was born in 1906 in Newcastle, Ontario and grew up in Moose Jaw Saskatchewan. He worked for Canadian Pacific Railways in many different towns before settling in Regina. McCargar began painting using paint-by-number sets, but in 1958 on the advice of his neighbor, the acclaimed artist Ken Lochhead, he began creating his own compositions. Like many other folk-artists of his generation, McCargar received support and recognition from the Saskatchewan arts community through exhibition and collection. His use of unusual materials such as glitter inspired well-known artist David Thauberger to be similarly experimental in his own practice. A major retrospective of his work was held by Dunlop Art Gallery in 1987. His work is held in public collections including the Canadian Museum of History in Hull, Quebec.