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By 1874 membership
in the Society had risen to 40 artists, engravers and architects.
The exhibition for that year was held in June at the Music
Hall on Toronto’s Church Street. Although the provincial
government would continue to give the Society a $500 grant
towards the Art Union over the next few years, the records
of which artworks might have been purchased are inconsistent.
How and by whom the works were chosen, especially
in the early years, is also not clear. In the lead-up to
the1875 annual exhibition, the Minutes of the Society’s
regular February meeting reveal consideration of the issue:
“After a lengthy and full discussion
as to the best mode of selecting pictures for the
government so as to secure such as would be a credit
to the Society and at same time give equal chance
to the artists it was moved . . . and resolved that
the Society request that the Government selection
be confined to pictures of not less than $75 and that
they be selected from the best pictures in the Exhibition
. . .” |
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Whatever the final arrangement
entailed, at least two watercolours are known to have been
acquired by the government from the Society’s 3rd annual
exhibition: Summer has Come Again by Daniel
Fowler and Lords of the Forest by Lucius
R. O’Brien.
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see a larger image (235K)
Summer Has Come Again, 1874-1875
Daniel Fowler, OSA
Watercolour on paper, 69.4 x 48.3 cm
Purchased by the Government of Ontario
from the 3rd annual OSA
Exhibition, 1875
Government of Ontario Art Collection, 619799
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to see larger image (189K)
Lords of the Forest, 1874
Lucius R. O’Brien
Watercolour on paper
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto
Gifted by the Government of Ontario to the AGO
in 1972 |
In addition
to the annual search for a suitable space for the exhibition,
the Society continued to be concerned with the lack of art
education in the province. Schools like the Mechanics Institute
could provide basic classes in technical subjects, while
art instruction tended to be limited to private lessons
in the homes or studios of the city’s more established
artists.
Following deputations from the Society to
lobby then Minister of Education, the Honourable Adam Crooks,
a grant of $1,000 was made available in1876. The grant allowed
the renovation of leased premises at 14 King Street West
big enough to be used as both art school classrooms and
gallery space. Long-time secretary of the Society, R. F.
Gagen would later comment about the first exhibition held
there:
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“This was much in advance of
the previous ones, there being a greater variety of
subjects, the lighting of the new rooms also showing
them off to best advantage. It introduced to the Toronto
public no less than ten new members . . .” |
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![Photo: Robert Ford Gagen in his studio, [ca. 1900]](pics/10391_ford_gagen_270.jpg)
Click
to see a larger image (119K)
Robert Ford Gagen in his studio, [ca. 1900]
Ontario
Society of Artists fonds
Black and white print
Reference Code: F 1140-7-0-1
Archives of Ontario, I0010391
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The government purchased Daniel Fowler’s
Water Mill, Berncastle on the Moselle from
this exhibition.
It is also quite possible that a watercolour by George
Harlow White, now in the collection, and listed in the OSA
catalogue for 1876 was acquired at the same time.

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to see a larger image (63K)
Entrance to the Lledr Valley, North Wales,
Storm Clearing Off, 1876
George Harlow White
Watercolour
Government of Ontario Art Collection, 619738
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Watermill near Berncastle, on the Moselle, 1876
Daniel Fowler, OSA
Watercolour on paper
This work was purchased by the Government of Ontario
from the 4th annual OSA
Exhibition, 1876
Government of Ontario Art Collection, 692621 |
On
October 30, 1876 the modest classrooms were opened as the
Ontario School of Art with 25 students enrolled. The instructors
were drawn from the OSA
membership and included Lucius O’Brien, Charlotte
Schreiber, John A. Fraser, R. Baigent, Henri Perré,
and Marmaduke Matthews. Thomas Mower Martin was appointed
the school’s first Director. Daytime and evening classes
were offered for which the teachers were paid $4 per lesson.
While the school would continue to grow, its
financial situation remained tenuous. The Society relied
on continuous lobbying efforts in order to secure a commitment
of long-term funding from the provincial government. |
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While the Society
was pressing for the establishment of a publicly-funded
permanent art school, it continued to hold its annual exhibitions.
In 1877 it once again used the facilities offered by its
King Street gallery.
Although no records detail the government
purchases for this year, a grant in aid of the Art Union
for $500 was made in addition to the $1,100 allocated for
the art school. The OSA’s own accounts record $520
as being spent on paintings for the Ontario Collection.
The only work listed in the exhibition catalogue and found
in the collection today however, is George Harlow White’s,
The Market Place, Quebec offered for sale
at $25.
Click
to see a larger image (221K)
The Market Place, Quebec, 1877
George Harlow White
Watercolour on paper
Government of Ontario Art Collection, 619740 |
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The cost of the works as well as
the method of selection for the government purchases would
vary over the ensuing years. As the price of the work tended
to be equated with quality, F. M. Bell Smith proposed at the
June 16 meeting in 1876 that the $500 government grant be
used to purchase pictures valued at $100 each.
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However, this
motion was not carried and instead it was approved that
no restriction be put on price but that works “shall
be chosen first, and be of the best quality.”
In order to make the selection based on these
criteria, each exhibiting member was instructed to vote
for works up to the amount of the grant. After review by
the committee responsible for vetting the selections, the
paintings with the highest number of votes would then be
purchased on the government’s behalf.
Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith, R.C.A., [before 1924]
M. O. Hammond
Black and white print
Reference Code: F 1075-12-0-0-31
Archives of Ontario, I0007798 |
![Photo: Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith, [before 1924]](pics/7798_bell_smith_270.jpg) |
| The Society’s sixth annual
exhibition was held in May of 1878 again at the Society’s
Gallery on King Street West. Although the government provided
the $500 grant to the Art Union, no records of any purchases
have been located and none of the 218 works listed in the
catalogue can be found in the collection today.
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![Oil on canvas: A Quiet Afternoon, Beaupre, [n.d.]](pics/ac622064_spurrcutts_520.jpg)
Click
to see a larger image (160K)
A Quiet Afternoon, Beaupre, [n.d.]
Gertrude Eleanor Spurr Cutts, OSA
Oil on canvas
This work was purchased by the Government of Ontario
from the 33rd annual OSA
Exhibition, 1905
Government of Ontario Art Collection, 622064 |
After 1878,
the Society’s minutes often included a listing of
the works purchased from subsequent exhibitions. From the
succeeding two exhibitions held in 1879 and 1880, the government
purchased a total of 20 paintings valued at $930. However,
none of these works are still in the collection. One, The
Newsboy by Robert Harris, was later recorded as
belonging to the OSA’s
own collection from which it was gifted to the Art Gallery
of Ontario in 1947.
Although the government continued to give
the Society the $500 grant, it is unclear if the money was
allocated in its entirety to purchase works for the province
or if a second collection belonging to the Society was also
being formed. |

Click
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OSA Minute
Book 1877 - 1881
Entry for Special General Meeting held May 16, 1879 listing
the nine works selected for the
Ontario Collection, pg 61
Ontario
Society of Artists fonds
Reference Code: F 1140-3
Archives of Ontario |

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to see a larger image (290K)
OSA Minute
Book 1877 - 1881
Entry for Special Meeting held May 13, 1880 listing the
eleven works selected for the Ontario Collection - pages 88-89
Ontario
Society of Artists fonds
Reference Code: F 1140-3
Archives of Ontario |
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![Photo: Robert Harris, [before 1920]](pics/7812_r_harris_270.jpg)
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It is not known
what direction was given by the government as to how the
annual grant should be used and the society's minutes and
annual reports often reveal a certain ambivalence towards
it. According to Vice-President, Robert Harris’s Report
for the year ending May 1, 1881, although in receipt of
the $500 grant, the Society expended only $250 on the “Ontario
Collection of Pictures Purchased.” At a meeting held
on May 3, 1881 the Executive decided that the $500 grant
would be better left in the bank for an indefinite period.
Robert Harris, C.M.G., R.C.A., [before 1920]
M. O. Hammond
Black and white print
Reference Code: F 1075-12-0-0-45
Archives of Ontario, I0007812 |
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Between 1881 and 1895 the
records make little mention of works purchased for the government
and it’s possible there were none. This situation
is not surprising given the frustration expressed by the
Society over the lack of funding for the school of art.
Click
to see a larger image (201K)
Catalogue of the OSA
14th Annual Exhibition
held at the Society's Gallery,
14 King Street West, Toronto, May 1886
Ontario
Society of Artists fonds
Reference Code: F 1140-3
Archives of Ontario
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In 1882, a new arrangement between
the OSA
and the government resulted in the move of the school to
rooms provided in the Normal School Building in St. James
Square, site of present day Ryerson University.
However, by 1884 relations between the Society and the
government concerning this arrangement had become strained.
The situation came to a head over what the Society felt
to be unwarranted interference by Dr. S. P. May, the government's
representative on the Art School's Governing Council. The
exasperation of the Council’s position is revealed
in the letter of resignation sent in February by Lucius
O’Brien to the OSA’s
vice president: |
“I beg to resign
my position as member of the Council of the Ontario
School of Art. The teachers are hampered and the teaching
impaired by injudicious arrangements and restrictions,
and finding every attempt at improvement thwarted
by the representative of the Government on the board,
or through his influence, I decline to be held responsible
for the injury to the school which has accrued and
must continue to accrue from such a course.” |
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Following O’Brien’s
resignation, the OSA
offered to sever its ties with the school. With the agreement
of the province’s new Minister of Education, George
Ross, the Society’s involvement with the provincial
art school would lay dormant until 1890.
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