Mary Riter Hamilton

Mary Riter Hamilton
Born Teeswater, Ontario
Died Vancouver, British Columbia
Nationality Canadian
Spouse(s) Charles W. Hamilton

Mary Riter Hamilton (1873–1954) was a Canadian artist. In 1919, she painted the battlefields of France and Belgium, recording the aftermath of World War I. She has been dubbed "Canada’s First Woman Artist",[1] although this is chronologically false.[2]

Life and work

Mary Riter Hamilton was born in Teeswater, Ontario in 1873.[3] Shortly after her birth, the family moved to Clearwater, Manitoba. She retained her ties with Manitoba in her later life.[2]

In 1889, when she was 18, she married Charles W. Hamilton, a merchant, and moved to Port Arthur, Ontario to be with him.[4] The marriage was short as her husband died four years later in 1893. She then began painting china and waterpaint in Winnipeg, Manitoba.[5] She briefly went to study in Toronto, Ontario and eventually moving to Europe studying in Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and France.[3] In 1906, she returned to Winnipeg because of her mother's failing health.[2][4] In 1911, she had a gallery show in Toronto with 150 paintings.[3] In 1914, she then moved to Victoria, Ontario.[6]

On her return from Europe, Hamilton organized a number of successful exhibitions of her work in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Winnipeg and Calgary. The start of World War I prevented her from returning to Paris. She spent the years of the war in Victoria, British Columbia supporting herself by selling her work and taking portrait commissions.[2]

During the First World War, Mary Riter Hamilton actively campaigned to return to Europe as a war artist to document Canada’s military contribution. It wasn't until 1919, where H.F. Paton, a Vancouver publisher, began to compile a work entitled 'The Gold Stripe' which collected stories, photographs and memorabilia about the Great War, with proceeds sent to 'The Amputation Club of British Columbia', that commissioned Hamilton to produce paintings of the French battlefields. For three years, she lived in a tin hut, at first with a Canadian army contingent but later with Chinese workers hired to clear the Western Front of the debris of war despite gangs of criminals and deserters.[4][7] She painted on canvases as various as plywood, paper, canvas and cardboard.[8] The makeshift shelters, poor food and hostile weather left her emotionally and physically drained, never being able to paint with the same intensity again. Between 1919 and 1922, Hamilton painted with whatever materials came to hand, recording the destruction left by the war, the commemorations of those lost and the celebrations of the return to normal life. She painted more than 300 images in the uncomfortable and sometimes dangerous conditions of the former Western Front.[3][9] The War Amps would later produce an award-winning documentary called 'No Man's Land', re-telling Mary Riter Hamilton's story.[8]

It is fortunate that I arrived before it was too late to get a real impression. The first day I went over Vimy [Ridge], snow and sleet were falling, and I was able to realize what the soldiers had suffered. If as you and others tell me, there is something of the suffering and heroism of the war in my pictures it is because at that moment the spirit of those who fought and died seemed to linger in the air. Every splintered tree and scarred clod spoke of their sacrifice. Since then, nature has been busy covering up the wounds, and in a few years the last sign of war will have disappeared. To have been able to preserve some memory of what this consecrated corner of the world looked like after the storm is a great privilege and all the reward an artist could hope for.[10]

Mary Riter Hamilton, in an interview with Frederick G. Falla, The McClure Newspaper Syndicate for release September 10, 1922

Exhibitions of the earlier paintings took place in Vancouver and Victoria in 1920. Further exhibitions were held at the Palais Garnier in Paris in 1922; and in Amiens and then in London at Surrey House.

In 1926, she donated 227 of her battlefield works to the Canadian Public Archives, wanting the works for the "benefit of war veterans, their families and future generations."[2]

She retired, partially blind, to Vancouver, British Columbia in the 1930s, eventually dying there in 1954.[2] Her body was transported to Port Arthur, Ontario and was buried beside her husband.[6]

Honors

Legacy

In 1988, War Amputations of Canada released No Man's Land a documentary short focusing on Mary Riter Hamilton and the collection of her war paintings in the care of Library and Archives Canada.[11]

References

  1. "Mary Riter Hamilton, Canada’s First Woman Artist". Calgary Herald. 24 April 1922.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Manitoba History: Mary Riter Hamilton: Manitoba Artist 1873-1954". Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "HAMILTON, Mary Riter". Canadian Women Artists History Initiative Artist Database. Concordia University. 23 May 2013. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 "Trenches on the Web - Special: The Battlefield Art of Mary Riter Hamilton". Trenches on the Web. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  5. "ARCHIVED - NA - Traces of War - Mary Riter Hamilton". Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  6. 1 2 "Archives Search". Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  7. Baker, Alan R. H; Black, Iain3; Butlin, Robin Alan (2001). Place, Culture, and Identity: Essays in Historical Geography in Honour of Alan R.H. Baker. p. 332. ISBN 9782763778075.
  8. 1 2 "No Man's Land: The Battlefield Paintings of Mary Riter Hamilton 1919-1922". War Amputations of Canada. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  9. "ARCHIVED - NA - Traces of War - Mary Riter Hamilton". Library and Archive Canada. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  10. "Traces of War, Mary Riter Hamilton". Library and Archive Canada. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  11. "No Man's Land". War Amputations of Canada. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
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