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Sechelt receives donation of art

Pubic Library
art
Don Jarvis’ Night Forest, 1962, oil on masonite.

A recent donation to the District of Sechelt’s public art collection is now on display in the Sechelt Public Library. Night Forest, 1962, by the late Don Jarvis was generously gifted to the District of Sechelt this year by local arts supporters and philanthropists Bill and Heather Beamish.

“The District of Sechelt is pleased to receive the donation of this painting by Don Jarvis,” said Siobhan Smith, the arts, culture and communications coordinator for Sechelt. “Night Forest is an excellent example of the powerful and abstracted depictions of the coastal rainforest that Jarvis was known for, and we are honoured to add this painting to our collection.”

Night Forest is the second work by Jarvis in the public art collection. His painting Inscape – Night Forest, 1996 was purchased by the District of Sechelt in 2009.

Born in Vancouver, Donald (Don) Jarvis was an artist and teacher who made a significant impact on the West Coast arts community. After studying under artists B.C. Binning, Jack Shadbolt, and Hans Hofmann, Jarvis had his first solo exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery in 1950; that same year, the National Gallery of Canada acquired two of his paintings. Jarvis taught painting and drawing at Emily Carr University of Art + Design from 1950 to 1986. Jarvis’ exhibition history is extensive both nationally and internationally and he was awarded many distinguished honours during his career, including a Canada Council Senior Arts Fellowship in 1961, and named full member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 1967.

After retirement, Jarvis relocated to the Sunshine Coast where a retrospective of his work was held at the Sunshine Coast Arts Centre in 1991. Jarvis died in Sechelt on March 22, 2001.

Jarvis’ Night Forest is a welcomed addition to Sechelt’s growing public art collection. The first work of art to enter the municipal collection was a painting titled Sechelt Waterfront, 1902 by Henry J. DeForest. When the Village of Sechelt opened its first municipal hall in 1956, Geoffrey Whitaker presented the DeForest painting as a gift to the newly incorporated village. More recently, the District of Sechelt began commissioning works of art by local artists for inclusion into the collection. There are currently 12 works displayed inside Municipal Hall, and four sculptures located outside.

– Submitted