VSC Newsletter ~ July 2022

 

July 2022
Contact Information:

Secretary   victoriasketchclub@gmail.com

VSC website   www.victoriasketchclub.ca   
 
Facebook  
 https://www.facebook.com/victoriasketchclub/
Club News

VSC at Government House

British Columbia's Lieutenant Governor Janet Austin received members of the Victoria Sketch Club, and club president Gillian Rhodes thanked her for displaying members' work at Government House. The event was well-attended, and show curator Martin Segger addressed Her Honour and club members.

Also quietly present throughout the event was the ever-charming and obedient Vice-Regal Macduff Austin-Chester, the Lieutenant Governor's West Highland terrier.

2022 Summer Outdoor Program


This year’s summer program continues through August. E-mail info packages for this month's locations will be sent out by the VSC Secretary a day or two in advance of each outing. 
 
In general, club members arrive around 10 a.m. and paint/sketch until about noon, after which some gather together to socialize over lunch. Guests artists are welcome, especially if interested in possibly applying for VSC membership in the following fall or winter indoor sessions.

Rand Harrison
Questions? email Rand
Summer plein airs

July 5
Starling Lane Vineyard

While visiting Starling Lane Vineyard, member Christine Gollner graciously donated a painting of an archway at the gardens to vineyard owner, Jacqueline Wrinch. Christine painted it after a club's visit to the vineyard in 2020. Ms. Wrinch was absolutely delighted, and promptly walked around the gardens to show it to everyone present!

July 12
Island View Beach

This week's plein air was held at beautiful Island View Beach in Saanichton (the mosquitoes had vacated for the most part), and Mount Baker was at its shiniest. In addition to a magnificent view of the club's favourite mountain, the beach also offers lovely views of James, Sidney and D'Arcy Islands.

July 19
Abkhazi Gardens

A magnificent day at Victoria's secluded Abkhazi Gardens offered some cool, green respite from another hot day in Victoria. 

July 26
Emily Carr House

On another hot day in Victoria, members kept cool in the shade at the former club member, Emily Carr's beautiful house on Government Street. At right is member Myra Baynton's rendering of the house.
History Corner
by John Lover
Members who attended the reception for our Government House exhibition will recall the reference made by curator Martin Segger to Club member Archie Fairbairn and his connection to Government House. Martin was also kind enough to let Nirmala photograph a Fairbairn painting in the Government House collection.

Archibald MacDonald Duff Fairbairn was born in 1883 in East London, Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, where he articled as a law student and qualified as an attorney-at-law. Arriving in Canada in 1913, he secured a post with the provincial government of British Columbia.

A talented freelance artist, he painted in watercolour, tempera and oil, as well as drawing in pen and ink and charcoal. In Victoria he connected with the Island Arts and Crafts Society, contributed eight of his watercolours to the Society’s annual exhibition in 1916 and subsequently exhibited on eight more occasions up to 1935.  He also exhibited at the Vancouver Exhibition in 1930, representing the IACS, and at the Vancouver Art Gallery in 1941. 

Fairbairn was the subject of a chalk portrait displayed at the1929 annual show of the BC Society of Fine Arts by Scottish artist Ina Uhthoff, another society member then establishing a reputation in the region. More light-heartedly, he featured in a self-portrait entitled “Archie by Archie.”  (pictured at right)

He studied painting in England, Germany and America, and exhibited widely, becoming an appointed member of the American Water Colour Society in 1929.  His individual watercolour exhibition in Victoria’s Alexandra Ballroom in 1926 was described by a critic as “unquestionably one of the most interesting individual exhibitions ever shown locally.” This collection numbered about 80 pictures, and while the majority represented scenes within the province, notably in the Rockies region, others captured scenes from France and Egypt.

An inveterate traveler, he undertook many sketching trips in the 1930s and 1940s, from which he depicted First Nations villages and totem poles in Haida Gwait and in the Skeena and Bulkley valleys. His interest in indigenous culture was profound and led him to publish a series of plays and short stories about native life on the Pacific coast.

In 1930 he was appointed by Order in Council as private secretary to His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia. Later, in 1932, a nearby residence, at 960 Joan Crescent, was built for him in Tudor Revival style.

Archibald Fairbairn was clearly not only a fine watercolourist but a man of many talents.  But it is maybe fitting that when he sailed for England in 1956, his registration at Southampton shows his occupation as “artist.” 

He died in California in 1979.
Fun Stuff 
VSC member Virginia Hutzuliak is still going strong with the rock to house painting exercise we did at WPP earlier this year. Thanks for this, Virginia!
Members in the News
Here's a shot from the Oak Bay News of Pat Hindmarch-Watson, alongside fellow winning artist Paul Redchurch, unfurling a banner bearing her painting entitled Almost There, Grandpa! The banners will hang along Oak Bay Avenue for the season. Congratulations, Pat!
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