
Pellerin: Portrait of a country — a new book captures these faces
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Jason Donville co-chairs the Kingston Prize and is passionate about making every Canadian aware of it. It is inspired by Australia's Archibald Prize, and it offers $25,000 to the winner, chosen by an independent jury, among entries by Canadian artists depicting Canadians in portraits based on real-life encounters.
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The book published to celebrate the first two decades of the prize shows how portraits capture the essence and evolution of who we are as a country. (You can find the images contained in the book on the Kingston Prize website under 'Exhibitions,' which is a nice way to make art widely accessible.)
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What's interesting and special about the Kingston Prize, Donville explains, is that historically Canada has defined its artistic excellence through landscape, and not just because of the Group of Seven. 'We were a young country that didn't really know what we were about,' he says, 'so we've gone to the land as a way to express ourselves.'
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And for sure we have spectacular landscapes. 'But the face of Canada is an important part of who we are and our identity,' he adds. One that is complex, diverse and sometimes a little challenging.
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Looking at those portraits, I can't stop myself from imagining their stories. Families, soldiers, people who appear lonely, others whose hardship I can feel jumping off the page at me. Like the 2007 winner, Emily, by Etobicoke-based painter Joshua Choi. She is sitting on a simple chair, with no background to speak of. Everything is in her tired eyes and heavy lower lip. She seems so exhausted. What could have caused her to be this way?
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At the other end of the happiness spectrum, I found joy looking at Brian Michon's Lloyd and Elsie from 2009, and I was inspired by the defiance in Ian Stone's Moon-kissed from 2023.
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I appreciate that the stories I imagine about the subjects of those portraits aren't obvious in the paintings. Anyone looking at this book would find other portraits striking and see some of their own stories reflected at them. That is the magic of art: every single person receiving it has their own way of interpreting it. There is no right or wrong way to appreciate a painting.
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