Toronto Art Students' League

Toronto Art Students' League
Formation1886; 138 years ago (1886)
FounderJ.D. Kelly, W.W. Alexander, Charles Macdonald Manly, and Alfred H. Howard
TypeArts association
Legal statusCharity
Purposemutual study from life, for picture composition classes and for outdoor sketching
HeadquartersToronto, Ont., Canada
Region
Canada
Official language
English, French

The Toronto Art Students' League or the Toronto Art League as it was called from 1899 on was an association of artists that existed from 1886 to 1904 and advocated drawing from the antique, and drawing and painting from life as a key to making art. It was a way of circulating recent art developments such as the Arts & Crafts movement and Art Nouveau as well as serving as a training ground and as a way of providing encouragement and fellowship for younger artists.[1] It met about once a week to produce drawings from life and its operative mottos were the disciplinary "Nulla Dies Sine Linea" and "Non Clamor Sed Amor".[2]

The League followed examples such as the New York Art Students’ League ([NYASL), founded in 1875, and the Art Students’ League of Philadelphia, which was established in 1886 (Leaguers followed its founding closely).[2] Its formation was largely as a consequence of the inactivity of the Toronto School of Art. The League founders were J.D. Kelly, W.W. Alexander, Charles Macdonald Manly and Alfred H. Howard and it included in its membership printmakers such as John Wesley Cotton and William Daniel Blatchly, as well as artist/illustrators John D. Kelly, C. W. Jefferys and Fred Brigden among others.[2]

Women were admitted to membership in the League in 1890.[2] Members contributed to the League Calendars (1893-1904)[3][4] and were included In League exhibitions, begun in 1899.[2][5] Sketching trips were taken by League members as far away as the Niagara Peninsula, Muskoka, Quebec City, and the Richelieu River Valley. A feeling for Canadian art "was transmitted through the teaching of some of its members, such as Robert Holmes, Manly and J.E.H. MacDonald at the Central Ontario Art School (later the Ontario College of Art and Design), and in their work and that of others... as an influence on the students who succeeded us", said Jefferys who credits the League with being the origin of the Canadian Landscape School and thus, ultimately of the Group of Seven.[2]

By 1899 the active function of the League was largely absorbed by its offshoot, the Mahlstick Club, and the founding in 1903 of the Graphic Arts Club (GAC), with Jefferys acting as first president. The GAC became the Canadian Society of Graphic Art in 1924, and evolved into the establishment of the Canadian Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1916.[2]

  1. ^ Burant, Jim. "Printmaking". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Jefferys, C.W. (2017). ""Reminiscences of Old Litho. Life". (unpublished holograph ms. relating to period 1885–1890). From the From "The Old Litho Life" to "Never a Day without a Line" / De l'atelier de lithographie traditionnel à celui où il ne se passe " pas un jour sans un trait " by Robert Stacey". National Gallery of Canada Journal. 8 (June): 99–134. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  3. ^ "W. D. Blatchly, Toronto Art League Calendars,". www.cwjefferys.ca. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  4. ^ "Artists". ago.ent.sirsidynix.net. Art Gallery of Ontario. Retrieved 25 September 2024.
  5. ^ "Toronto Art League winter exhibition: November 25th to December 9th, 1899". ago.ent.sirsidynix.net. Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. Retrieved 2 October 2024.