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{{Infobox artist
{{Infobox artist
| name = Charlotte Schreiber
| name = Charlotte Schreiber
| image = Photo of Charlotte Schreiber.jpg
| image = Mrs. Charlotte M. B. Schreiber, R.C.A. (I0007895).jpg
| imagesize =
| imagesize =
| caption =
| caption = Charlotte M.B. Schreiber, working in her studio at Erindale, Ontario, 1895
| birth_name = Charlotte Mount Brock Morrell
| birth_name = Charlotte Mount Brock Morrell
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1834|05|21}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1834|05|21}}
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==Work==
==Work==
[[File:Photo of Charlotte Schreiber.jpg|thumb|Charlotte M.B. Schreiber, working in her studio at Erindale, Ontario, 1895]]
Schreiber's contributions to Canadian art are immense. She painted scenes of everyday life, and she based her paintings on the things she saw and the people she knew personally. For instance, her 1876 painting ''Don`t Be Afraid'' (previously titled ''Springfield on the Credit'')<ref name="bruce" /> is based on close observation of children playing in the snow on the banks of the Credit River.<ref name="prakash">{{cite book|title=Independent Spirit: Early Canadian Women Artists|last1=Prakash|first1=A.K.|date=10 October 2008|publisher=Firefly Books|isbn=978-1554074174}}</ref> Because of her insistence and commitment to realism, Schreiber is credited with introducing the realist style to Canada. Further, her experience in England allowed her to carry over European stylistic changes in art to Canada, leading directly to the country's artistic maturity. Schreiber's work epitomized the realist movement through the influence of both neoclassicism and romanticism. This can be seen in her ''Portrait of Edith Quinn,'' showcasing the naturalism portrayed in contemporary literature while maintaining a detailed, realistic portrayal of the subject.<ref name="prakash" />
Schreiber's contributions to Canadian art are immense. She painted scenes of everyday life, and she based her paintings on the things she saw and the people she knew personally. For instance, her 1876 painting ''Don`t Be Afraid'' (previously titled ''Springfield on the Credit'')<ref name="bruce" /> is based on close observation of children playing in the snow on the banks of the Credit River.<ref name="prakash">{{cite book|title=Independent Spirit: Early Canadian Women Artists|last1=Prakash|first1=A.K.|date=10 October 2008|publisher=Firefly Books|isbn=978-1554074174}}</ref> Because of her insistence and commitment to realism, Schreiber is credited with introducing the realist style to Canada. Further, her experience in England allowed her to carry over European stylistic changes in art to Canada, leading directly to the country's artistic maturity. Schreiber's work epitomized the realist movement through the influence of both neoclassicism and romanticism. This can be seen in her ''Portrait of Edith Quinn,'' showcasing the naturalism portrayed in contemporary literature while maintaining a detailed, realistic portrayal of the subject.<ref name="prakash" />



Revision as of 11:11, 4 October 2023

Charlotte Schreiber
Born
Charlotte Mount Brock Morrell

(1834-05-21)21 May 1834
Woodham Mortimer, Essex, United Kingdom
Died3 July 1922(1922-07-03) (aged 88)
Paignton, Devon, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish-Canadian
Known forPainting
SpouseWeymouth George Schreiber
Charlotte Schreiber, The Croppy Boy (The Confession of an Irish Patriot) (1879). Oil on canvas. 91.6 × 76.2 cm. National Gallery of Canada

Charlotte Mount Brock Schreiber RCA (21 May 1834 – 3 July 1922[1]) was an English-Canadian painter and illustrator, among the first of Canada's notable female painters.[2]

Early life

Schreiber, née Morrell, was born in Essex, England. Before marrying and emigrating to Canada in 1875, she studied and found success in her native country. At Mr. Carey's School of Art in London, she trained with John Rogers Herbert, R.A., who specialized in historical paintings and portraits.[1] She also studied anatomy and acquired a great understanding and appreciation for the human form: she wrote in 1895, "The human hand, the finger nail, the foot, every portion of the living body, the parts of a flower, are divinely beautiful … it is a joy to paint them as they are in reality".[1] Equipped with this training, Schreiber achieved professional success early in her career, exhibiting at the Royal Academy at the age of 21 and receiving commissions to illustrate several books. In 1875, she married her cousin Weymouth Schreiber and moved to Canada with him and his three children, settling in Toronto.[3]

Toronto

Schreiber quickly got involved in the Toronto art scene. In 1876, a year after she emigrated, she was elected to the Ontario Society of Artists, and the following year, she became the first woman to teach at the Ontario School of Art, today's OCAD University, where she was also the only woman to serve on the school's council. She also played a role as a founding member of the Women's Art Association of Canada.[4]

In 1880, Schreiber became the first woman elected to the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts,[1] which had been strictly and exclusively male until then. However, despite this great achievement, she was not permitted to attend meetings or engage in policy-making, and she remained the only woman on the academy until 1933 (53 years later), when the second woman, Marion Long, was elected. The National Gallery of Canada holds the painting that she submitted toward her Academy diploma. Titled The Croppy Boy (The Confession of an Irish Patriot), it is based on the Irish ballad "The Croppy Boy", which was popular during the Irish rebellion of the 1790s. It tells the story of a youth who stops in a church to confess his sins as he prepares for the battle of Wexford. His audience, however, is not a Catholic priest, but a disguised British soldier who arrests him and takes him for execution. The painting shows the youth on his knees, earnestly addressing the cloaked soldier, whose uniform is visible to the viewer but not to the penitent. The two figures are united by the red in their clothing, but the soldier occupies the shadowy portion of the canvas, with the youth on the lighter side, perhaps suggesting Schreiber's sympathies.[1]

Work

Charlotte M.B. Schreiber, working in her studio at Erindale, Ontario, 1895

Schreiber's contributions to Canadian art are immense. She painted scenes of everyday life, and she based her paintings on the things she saw and the people she knew personally. For instance, her 1876 painting Don`t Be Afraid (previously titled Springfield on the Credit)[4] is based on close observation of children playing in the snow on the banks of the Credit River.[5] Because of her insistence and commitment to realism, Schreiber is credited with introducing the realist style to Canada. Further, her experience in England allowed her to carry over European stylistic changes in art to Canada, leading directly to the country's artistic maturity. Schreiber's work epitomized the realist movement through the influence of both neoclassicism and romanticism. This can be seen in her Portrait of Edith Quinn, showcasing the naturalism portrayed in contemporary literature while maintaining a detailed, realistic portrayal of the subject.[5]

Her art was influenced by literature, including her early illustrations of poems by Chaucer (The Legende of the Knight of the Red Crosse), Edmund Spenser (The Faerie Queene, illustrated 1871), and Elizabeth Barrett Browning (The Rhyme of the Duchess May, 1874).

Later years

After a long and successful career in Canada, Schreiber moved back to England in 1898 after the death of her husband, and she died in Paignton, South Devon, England in 1922.

Record sale prices

At the Cowley Abbott Auction, Important Canadian Art (Sale 2) December 1, 2022, lot #131, Edith Schreiber with her Sleigh, oil on board, 12.25 x 9.25 ins ( 31.1 x 23.5 cms ), Auction Estimate: $10,000.00 - $15,000.00, realized a price $138,000.00.[6]

References

  1. ^ Charlotte M.B. Schreiber Archived 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Libraries and Archives Canada. Accessed 16 June 2010
  2. ^ Babb, Charlotte Henley. "Charlotte Schreiber: Canadian Artist". Charlotte Henley Babb. Archived from the original on 2 April 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  3. ^ a b Bruce, Tobi (2015). "Revisiting Charlotte Schreiber". Embracing Canada: Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven. Ian M. Thom (ed.). Vancouver and London, Eng.: Vancouver Art Gallery and Black Dog Publishing. pp. 36ff. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  4. ^ a b Prakash, A.K. (10 October 2008). Independent Spirit: Early Canadian Women Artists. Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1554074174.
  5. ^ "Important Canadian Art (Sale 2)". cowleyabbott.ca. Cowley Abbott. Retrieved 2 December 2022.