Mist: Princess Louisa Inlet

Mist: Princess Louisa Inlet, 1971. Graphite/charcoal on paper by Lillian Irene Hoffar Reid (1908-1994)

Mist: Princess Louisa Inlet, 1971. Graphite/charcoal on paper by Lillian Irene Hoffar Reid (1908-1994)

Name/Title

Mist: Princess Louisa Inlet

Entry/Object ID

2016.04.10

Description

Drawing This broad vista landscape in sketch form depicts mists hovering over Princess Louisa Inlet, a deep fiord traditionally named “swiwelát” for its sunny warmth, found north of Vancouver, B.C. and known for its magnificent scenic beauty. It has been called "the most beautiful anchorage in the world" with its granite cliffs, numerous waterfalls, mossy forests, and abundant wildlife. Located in Desolation Sound at the northern end of the Salish Sea and the Sunshine Coast in B.C. the inlet can only be reached by boat or float plane. Although the inlet has some sixty waterfalls, there are two worthy of special mention. James Bruce Falls, known as the highest (measured) waterfall in North America and the ninth tallest in the world, has water falling from 840 meters into the inlet below. Not as high, but equally magical is Chatterbox Falls at 37 meters.

Artwork Details

Medium

Graphite/charcoal on paper

Subject Place

Region

Cascades and Plateau

Continent

North America

Context

The source of the Inlet's name is uncertain. It may have been named for Princess Louise, the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria whose husband was the Marquess of Lorne, Governor General of Canada from 1878 to 1883. However, the more accepted notion is that the inlet is named for Queen Victoria's mother, Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, who was born Mary Louise Victoria. Established in 1965, Princess Louisa Marine Provincial Park which surrounds much of the inlet is home to over 930 hectares of land. Much of this land was donated to the province of B.C. to become a protected Provincial Marine Park. The core was acquired in 1964, and the non-profit Princess Louisa International Society continues to seek contributions to buy additional land around the inlet and to help maintain the park.

Made/Created

Artist Information

Artist

Lillian Irene Hoffar Reid (1908-1994)

Role

Artist

Date made

1971

Time Period

20th Century

Notes

ARTIST BIOGRAPHY Born in Vancouver, Lillian Irene Hoffar Reid was a celebrated Canadian painter of portraits, murals, and decorative panels, as well as an educator. She attended the newly opened Vancouver School of Decorative and Applied Arts (VSDAA, now Emily Carr University of Art and Design), where she was trained by Jock Macdonald RCA, (1897-1960), Frederick Varley RCA, (1881-1969) and Charles H. Scott (1886-1964), and learned about the famed Canadian Group of Seven. Of note, Scott served as principal from 1926 until 1952 and was key in getting Macdonald and Varley to teach at the school. In 1929, she and 11 of her classmates were the VSDAA's first graduating class. Following her graduation, she helped form the “Pioneer Art Students of the Vancouver Art School’ group that mounted annual exhibits. Reid took sketching trips to the North Vancouver Indian Reservation, Burrard Street Bridge squatter's huts and shorelines around Vancouver. In 1930, she was awarded a scholarship for a year’s study at the Royal Academy, London for a year. Reid first worked in oil, and later focused on drawing in graphite, pastels and painting in watercolours. The subject matter of her paintings shifted as well as domestic life took up more time. However she still managed to make sketching trips such as to the Cariboo, Jervis inlet and Bowen Island. On her return from London, Reid established a studio and became a teacher of drawing and painting at her alma mater (1933-1937). A significant and active member of the Vancouver art community, she was a member of both the British Columbia Society of Artists (1940-1967, and president 1965-1967) and the Canadian Group of Painters (1959-1967, and president in 1958, 1960, and 1966-1967). She showed extensively in solo and group exhibitions in Vancouver, central and western Canada and once in the United States. Reid received the Beatrice Stone Medal at the B.C. Artists' Annual (1940), and the Canadian Centennial Medal for her contribution to the arts in Canada. Her work is represented in a number of private and public collections. Reid and the other women in her graduating class were awarded honorary diplomas in 1989 from the Emily Carr College of Art and Design (previously VSDAA). She died in Sidney, B.C. at age 86.

Inscription/Signature/Marks

Type

Signature, Date

Location

Signed and dated lower right: Irene Hoffar Reid '71

Transcription

Titled and dated lower left: Mist: Princess Louisa Inlet

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Support

Height

45.7 cm

Width

61 cm

Acquisition

Acquisition Method

Purchase

Date

Jul 11, 2016

Notes

Lunds Lot #627

Relationships

Related Entries

Notes

By Lillian Irene Hoffar Reid: 2016.01.15 Sidney Spit 2016.01.17 Spanish Banks Looking toward the City 2016.04.09 Princess Louisa Inlet 2016.04.10 Mist: Princess Louisa Inlet