Gladys Johnston

{{Short description|Canadian artist}}

Gladys Johnston (née Foster; 1906–1983) was a Canadian artist known primarily for her landscapes. Johnston was a self-taught painter; she was also an author, writing local and family history books and travel stories. Johnston spent most of her life in British Columbia, living in Salmon Arm from 1944 until her death in 1983.{{cite web|url=http://www.sknac.ca/index.php?page=ArtistDetail&id=404|publisher=Saskatchewan NAC|title=Gladys Johnston|accessdate=7 March 2015}} Major exhibitions of her work were held in 1988{{cite book|last1=Ainslie|first1=Patricia|last2=Cran|first2=Chris|title=The Vibrant Art of Gladys Johnston|date=1988|publisher=Glenbow-Alberta Institute|location=Calgary, Canada|ISBN=0-919224-80-6|page=6}} and 2007.{{cite web|url=http://www.stride.ab.ca/arc/archive_2007/gladys_johnston_main/gladys_johnston.htm|publisher=Stride Gallery|year=2007|title=Exhibit information: Gladys Johnston}}

Biography

File:Gladys Johnston painting titled Man in Canoe and Grizzly, 1960's.jpg

Johnston was born Gladys Foster in Birch Hills, Saskatchewan in 1906. She showed promise as an artist at an early age. As a child on her family's dairy farm she would often draw the team of horses grazing outside her kitchen window. Her family encouraged her in developing these skills, alongside her studies in piano and writing. In 1925 she completed a brief painting course at the University of Saskatchewan.{{cite book|last1=Ainslie|first1=Patricia|last2=Cran|first2=Chris|title=The Vibrant Art of Gladys Johnston|date=1988|publisher=Glenbow-Alberta Institute|isbn=0-919224-80-6|page=29}} She married Ernest Johnston in 1926, with whom she had three sons. Johnston's painting may have been influenced by her husband. (Her husband also painted, and he had spent time learning from Charles Russell in Montana before his marriage.) However, her earliest works predate the marriage, and her color sense and style of paint application was very different from her husband's. Her earliest works are signed Gladys Foster.{{cite book|last1=Ainslie|first1=Patricia|last2=Cran|first2=Chris|title=The Vibrant Art of Gladys Johnston|date=1988|publisher=Glenbow-Alberta Institute|location=Calgary, Canada|ISBN=0-919224-80-6|page=10}}

Gladys Johnston was very industrious as she homesteaded with her husband. There were many demands on her time as she raised her three sons, kept the household running, and helped with the trapping, log cabin construction and gardening. Her paintings were a part of how she supplemented the family income, along with writing and reading tea leaves. Her artworks were not lauded as special or rare pieces of fine art during this time. They were simply a part of her impetus to express herself in various ways, as well as another commodity with which she could support herself and her family.Ainslie & Cran, p. 14.

The subject matter of Gladys Johnston's paintings deal with the local geography of the places she lived in and around British Columbia, adventure scenes (such as a man in a canoe encountering a bear, a man being thrown from a horse), nature and other homesteading scenes. She kept several scrapbooks and diaries. The scrapbooks were filled with sketches and pages torn from popular magazines. Her diaries included records of things seen while traveling and lists of chores. These are written in a straightforward, yet often poetic, fashion.Ainslie & Cran, pp. 14–15.

Her vibrant use of colour is notable, as she made use of a full spectrum palette. The saturated hues are grounded by touches of black and nuanced neutrals. Purples are liberally used in skies and mountains. The sense of space is odd, subordinate to the narrative. Thin glazes sit next to thickly applied paintstrokes outlining figures.

Johnston died in Salmon Arm, British Columbia in 1983.

References

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Works cited

  • {{cite book|last1=Ainslie|first1=Patricia|last2=Cran|first2=Chris|title=The Vibrant Art of Gladys Johnston|date=1988|publisher=The Glenbow-Alberta Institute|location=Canada|isbn=0-919224-80-6}}

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Category:1906 births

Category:1983 deaths

Category:20th-century Canadian painters

Category:Artists from British Columbia

Category:Artists from Saskatchewan

Category:20th-century Canadian women painters