Tom Thomson
For the American politician, see Tommy Thompson.
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Thomas John Thomson (August 5, 1877 – July 8, 1917) was an influential Canadian artist of the early 20th century.
Related Topics:
August 5 - 1877 - July 8 - 1917 - Canadian - 20th century
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Born near Claremont, Ontario he grew up in Leith, near Owen Sound. In 1899 he unsuccessfully tried to volunteer to fight in the Boer War, and instead went to a business college in Seattle, Washington. In 1904 he returned to Canada, and in 1907 joined an artistic design firm in Toronto where many of the future members of the Group of Seven also worked. With his colleagues he often travelled around Canada, especially to the wilderness of northern Ontario, which was a major source of inspiration for Thomson. His first exhibition was in 1913.
Related Topics:
Claremont - Ontario - Leith - Owen Sound - 1899 - Boer War - Seattle - Washington - 1904 - 1907 - Toronto - Group of Seven - Northern Ontario - 1913
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Beginning in 1914 he acted as a fire fighter and guide in Algonquin Park in northern Ontario. During the next three years he produced many of his most famous works, including The Jack Pine and The West Wind. However, he disappeared during a canoeing trip in July of 1917, and his body was discovered on July 17. The official cause of death was drowning, but there are still questions about how he actually died. He was buried at Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park, but at the request of his family his body was reinterred in the family plot beside the United Church in Leith.
Related Topics:
1914 - Fire fighter - Algonquin Park - Northern Ontario - Canoe - July 17 - Drowning - United Church
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An historical marker concerning Tom Thomson was moved to the graveyard in the summer of 2004 from its earlier location nearer the centre of Leith.
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In 1967 the Tom Thomson Memorial Art Gallery opened in Owen Sound. Numerous examples of his work are on display at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg, Ontario and at the National Gallery in Ottawa, Ontario.
Related Topics:
1967 - McMichael Canadian Art Collection - Kleinburg, Ontario - National Gallery - Ottawa, Ontario
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A memorial cairn has been erected at Canoe Lake where Thomson drowned. It can be accessed by boat.
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He is often thought of as a member of the Group of Seven, although the Group was not officially founded until after Thomson's death. Nevertheless, his paintings are representative of the Group's style.
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In 1970, Judge William Little published a book, The Tom Thomson Mystery.
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In 2005, with the assistance of the Canadian Film Centre's Habitat new media lab, resident artists Trevor Haldenby, Anthony Saad, Gordon Culley, and James Chaarani produced an interactive biography of Tom Thomson. Entitled "Painting The Myth," the system for digital storytelling enables users to digitally paint through the layers of a deconstructed Thomson painting - using a uniquely designed infrared-video brush tracking system - triggering an audio story which unfolds based on the speed of their painting. The story tells of Thomson's life, work, and mysterious death; is told by those who knew him; and neglects to indulge a single fanciful theory of the cause of his death, in the name of encouraging users to develop their own interpretations of history.
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