Jump to content

Gordon Rayner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 05:15, 31 December 2020 (Task 18 (cosmetic): eval 8 templates: del empty params (7×); hyphenate params (5×); del |ref=harv (2×); del |url-status= (1×); cvt lang vals (1×);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Gordon Rayner
Born(1935-06-14)June 14, 1935
Toronto, Ontario
DiedSeptember 26, 2010(2010-09-26) (aged 75)
NationalityCanadian
Educationself-taught
Known forpainter, sculptor, film-maker, print-maker, also teacher at Toronto`s New School of Art (1965)
SpouseKate Regan
AwardsCanada Council Grants and Senior Fellowships (1961-1973); Toronto Outdoor Competition (1960), First prize for prints, 12th Winnipeg show (1970)

Gordon Rayner (June 14, 1935 – September 26, 2010) was a Canadian abstract expressionist painter. His way of creating art was idiosyncratic and characterized by constant innovation and often by transformation of his medium. Later, he integrated realism into his practice.

Biography

As a young person, Gordon Rayner learned to paint from his father, a commercial artist and weekend painter, and from his father`s close friend, Jack Bush. He spent 17 years working in commercial art, starting with Bush's commercial art firm, Wookey, Bush and Winter. An exhibition of Painters Eleven in 1955, and especially the work of William Ronald, which he visited with his friend, artist Dennis Burton, at Toronto's Hart House Gallery (today the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, Art Museum at the University of Toronto) turned him towards abstraction.[1]

Under the influence of the neo-Dada movement current in Toronto in the late 1950s and first half of the 1960s, Rayner began to combine found materials with his paintings.[2]

Mural by Rayner
Tempo, a mural by Rayner at Toronto's St. Clair West station

In 1966, he began a new period in his work centred around images of Magnetawan, an area 200 miles north of Toronto, north of the Muskoka District. It provided him with a favourite painting place in which he could experiment with materials and technique while demonstrating how to refer to nature without copying it in his work. To express his feelings, he used oblique references, a thick and expressionist technique, and sometimes found objects.[3] These paintings were intuitive reinterpretations of landscapes dramatically conceived.[4]

Rayner showed his work with Toronto's Isaacs Gallery.[5] For this reason, he has been called part of the Isaacs Group of artists, which include, among others, Michael Snow, Joyce Wieland, John Meredith and Graham Coughtry.

Rayner had numerous public commissions, among them mural Tempo (porcelain enamel on steel) for the Toronto Transit Commission, Spadina Subway line, St. Clair Station (1977).[6]

In the 1980s, his work shifted direction to a new interest in the figure. He began to reinvent this crucial subject of art for himself using dimensions of the inner, more spiritual self and obliquely explored realism in the context of the body, painting himself in inventive scenes. Some of these paintings are called the Oaxaca Suite, since Rayner lived in Oaxaca in southern Mexico in 1993 and 1994.[7]

On September 26, 2010, Gordon Rayner died suddenly at home. [8]

Collections

References

  1. ^ Rayner 1978, p. 17–19.
  2. ^ Rayner 1978, p. 22-26.
  3. ^ Rayner 1978, p. 23-25.
  4. ^ Nasgaard 2007, p. 237-239.
  5. ^ a b Bradfield, Helen (1970). Art Gallery of Ontario: the Canadian collection. Toronto: McGraw-Hill of Canada. ISBN 978-0-07-092504-5. OCLC 260161067.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j MacDonald 1979, p. 1954.
  7. ^ Rayner, Gordon. "Gordon Rayner". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  8. ^ Rayner, Gordon (September 30, 2010). "Obituary". Canadian press. Toronto Star. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  9. ^ "Gordon Rayner". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  10. ^ Rayner, Gordon. "works in the collection". rmg.minisisinc.com. Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa. Retrieved June 10, 2020.

Bibliography