Donald Jarvis
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Don Jarvis (1923-2001) was a Canadian abstract artist.
Born in Vicotoria in 1923, Don Jarvis loved to draw from an early age. An aspiring cartoonist as a teenager, Jarvis enrolled at the Vancouver School of Art and Design (later re-named the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design) and was encouraged by his teacher, B.C. Binning, to pursue fine art.
When he graduated in 1948, Jarvis won a scholarship . At the suggestion of Lawren Harris, he traveled to New York to study under the abstract expressionist Hans Hoffman. His time in New York produced his acclaimed, newly rediscovered collection of New York Drawings. Jarvis returned to Vancouver in 1950 and became a drawing and painting instructor at the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design. He remained there for 36 years. Jarvis died in Sechelt, BC in 2001, leaving his wife, Gladys, their two sons, Graham and Roy, and grandchildren, Jennifer and Scott and one of the most varied Canadian art collections.
"I see the painter as an instrument, a function, a conduit of the essential unity. My work is metaphor, never simile. I make no distinction between subject and object, inner and outer, maker and viewer. I am continually surprised by what arises on the canvas or the paper. I am not a 'creator'. How can one create what is already there? I am mist, trees, rain, sun brush, canvas, weather, season, figure." Don Jarvis 1999