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词条 Bobs Cogill Haworth
释义

  1. Biography

     Education and training  Private life  Career and official commissions  Exhibitions  Death and legacy 

  2. References

  3. External links

{{Infobox artist
| name = Bobs Cogill Haworth
| image = Bobs Cogill Haworth self portrait.jpg
| caption = Self portrait
| birth_date = {{birth date|1900|1|20|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Queenstown, South Africa
| death_date = {{death date and age|1988|3|30|1900|1|20|mf=y}}
| death_place = Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| nationality = South African-Canadian
| field = Painting, Ceramics
| training = Royal College of Art London, University of London
| movement = Abstraction
| spouse = Peter Haworth
| patrons = Isabel McLaughlin
}}

Zema Barbara "Bobs" Cogill Haworth[1] (1900–1988) was a South African-born Canadian painter and potter. She practiced mainly in Toronto, living and working with her husband, painter and teacher Peter Haworth. She co-founded the Canadian Group of Painters with Yvonne McKague Housser, Isabel McLaughlin and members of the Group of Seven.

Biography

Education and training

Haworth was born in Queenston, South Africa. She studied at the Royal College of Art in London, England under Professor William Rothenstein, Dora Billington, and Eric Gill, specializing in ceramics.{{sfn|Boyanoski|2013|p=1863}}

She received her degree of A.R.C.A. from the University of London, England.

She immigrated to Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1923.

Private life

Haworth lived a comfortable life in the fashionable upscale district of Rosedale in Toronto. Her and Peter's residence was often a mecca for artists holding formal meetings and small exhibitions.

Career and official commissions

From 1913 - 1968 she worked as a painter in watercolour, oils, and later in acrylic. She also used standard clay for her pottery works. The majority of her works are signed "B. Cogill Haworth" or "Bobs Cogill Haworth".

Haworth preferred landscape themes and waterscape themes but also ventured practice in non-objective paintings, some on a very large scale. Most of her paintings post-1950 were created on masonite and often signed on the front and verso; often with an artist's paper label.

In 1936, Bobs Haworth was one of the founding members of the Canadian Guild of Potters along with Nunzia D'Angel and Robert Montgomery.

Howarth was the first honorary president.{{sfn|Crawford|1998|p=44}}

Both Peter and Bobs Haworth made illustrations for Kingdom of the Saguenay (1936) by Marius Barbeau.{{sfn|University of British Columbia. Library|1973|p=7}}{{efn|

Other lllustrators of the Kingdom of the Saguenay were André Charles Biéler, Rody Kenny Courtice, A. Y. Jackson, George Pepper, Albert Edward Cloutier, Arthur Lismer, Gordon Edward Pfeiffer, Yvonne McKague Housser and Kathleen Daly.{{sfn|University of British Columbia. Library|1973|p=7}} }}

The Haworths also collaborated on illustrating James Edward Le Rossignol's The Habitant Merchant (1939).{{sfn|Boyanoski|2013|p=1863}}

Exhibitions

Haworth was a regular and prolific exhibitor with such institutions as the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (RCA),[2] Ontario Society of Artists (OSA), Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour (CSPWC), Canadian Group of Painters (CGP) among other formal and informal art groups and organizations.

Death and legacy

Haworth died peacefully at her home in Toronto. At her bequest, she left her entire art archives and remainder of her art works to Queen's University.[3]

References

Notes{{notes}}Citations
1. ^{{cite book|last1=Farr|first1=Dorothy|last2=Luckyj|first2=Natalie|title=From Women's Eyes: Women Painters in Canada|date=1975|publisher=Agnes Etherington Art Centre|location=Kingston|pages=50}}
2. ^{{cite web|title=Members since 1880 |url=http://www.rca-arc.ca/en/about_members/since1880.asp |publisher=Royal Canadian Academy of Arts |accessdate=11 September 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110526215339/http://www.rca-arc.ca/en/about_members/since1880.asp |archivedate=26 May 2011 |df= }}
3. ^Queen's University Archives - Private Manuscripts
Sources{{refbegin}}
  • {{cite book|ref=harv

|last=Boyanoski|first=Christine|title=North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ReZkAgAAQBAJ&pg=RA1-PA1863|accessdate=2014-07-23
|date=2013-12-19|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-135-63889-4|chapter=Haworth, Zema Barbara Cogill (1900-1988)}}
  • {{cite book|ref=harv

|last=Crawford|first=Gail|title=A Fine Line: Studio Crafts in Ontario from 1930 to the Present
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4l6V1PBHhyUC&pg=PA44|accessdate=2014-07-23
|year=1998|publisher=Dundurn|isbn=978-1-55002-303-9}}
  • {{cite book|ref=harv

|author=University of British Columbia. Library|title=A Checklist of Printed Materials Relating to French-Canadian Literature, 1763–1968
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qWhmvpPcqmAC&pg=PA7|accessdate=18 July 2014
|year=1973|publisher=UBC Press|isbn=978-0-7748-0007-5}}{{refend}}

External links

  • [https://www.mutualart.com/Artist/Bobs-Cogill-Haworth/EA6E1B80250F42D9 images of Haworth's work] on MutualArt
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Haworth, Zema Barbara Bobs Cogill}}

11 : 1900 births|1988 deaths|Canadian potters|Canadian women painters|South African emigrants to Canada|Members of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts|20th-century South African painters|20th-century Canadian women artists|Women potters|20th-century ceramists|Women ceramists

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