Edwin Holgate

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Artist |
Edwin Holgate |
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Birth |
August 19, 1892 |
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Birthplace |
Ontario, Canada |
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Death |
May 21, 1977 |
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Place of Death |
Montreal,  Quebec, Canada |
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Gender |
Male |
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Nationality |
Canada |
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Movement |
Canadian Group Of Seven |
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Media |
Painter |
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Edwin Holgate joined the Group in 1931 and is considered to have played a relatively minor role in their history. Previous to joining, Holgate had exhibited with the group as an invited contributor. He never exhibited as a Group member due to their disbanding shortly after he joined. Â Holgate was born in Ontario, but raised in Montreal, where he began studying art at an early age under William Brymer. Following a number of years in Paris, both before and after the war, he returned permanently to Montreal in 1922. Holgate than opened a studio and taught wood engraving at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. Â He was friendly with Jackson and the Montreal artists of the Beaver Hall group and often went sketching with them in Quebec. At this point, he was considered a promising young artist, capable of competent works such as The Cellist. However, Holgate never seemed to develop to the potential indicated by his early works. Â His best known works are a series combining nudes and landscapes.
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