Artist Ken Danby remembered as
Canada's storyteller
TORONTO - Ken Danby, recognized as one of the
world's foremost realist artists and best-known in
Canada for his iconic hockey painting, "At The
Crease," has died at the age of 67 while canoeing in
Algonquin Park on Sunday, September 23rd.
Born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Danby's vast
portfolio includes everything from portraits of
famous Canadians to athletes in mid-play and
landscape paintings so crystalline that at first
glance they resemble photographs.
"He aspired to be - and in many ways achieved -
the status of Canada's storyteller," Matthew
Teitelbaum, director of the Art Gallery of Ontario,
said in an interview on Monday.
"He wanted to be an artist who painted Canada in
its heroic moments and in its everyday moments ...
he wanted to tell people through his art that you
could paint realistically and capture great emotion
and generate great feeling, and he did."
Ken McGee, manager of the Danby Studio in Guelph,
Ont., called his friend a Canadian treasure.
"He's been called a national icon and that's
basically what he was," he said.
The prolific Danby was said to have known from a
young age that he wanted to paint, and enrolled in
the Ontario College of Art in 1958. His first
one-man show in 1964 sold out, an occurrence that
would become commonplace as his work proved popular
with private, corporate and museum collectors.
When asked to identify his favourite work, he
frequently replied: "My next one."
His 1972 painting of a masked hockey goalie
hunched in the crease is considered by many to be a
Canadian national symbol and is sometimes mistakenly
thought to be a portrait of legendary netminder Ken
Dryden. "Lacing Up," another hockey painting of
someone tying his skates in a locker room, is almost
equally iconic.
On his website, Danby recalled an encounter about
"At The Crease": "One day, a woman complimented me
on my painting 'At the Crease,' which she referred
to as 'That painting you did of the goalie, Ken
Dryden,"' he recalled.
"She said that she had long had a print of it in
her home and really enjoyed it. I thanked her, but
also explained that, 'It isn't an image of Ken
Dryden.' Looking puzzled, she replied, 'Yes it is.'
I responded, 'No it isn't.' After a long pause, she
loudly exclaimed, 'Yes it is!' I quickly apologized,
with the sudden realization that she was right. It's
really whomever one wants it to be."
The goalie painting is Danby's most successful
but there's a lot more to his work, McGee said.
"It's a worldwide image now. Over the years we
have sold literally hundreds of thousands of those
images - anybody who knows hockey knows that image
and therefore knows Ken Danby," he said.
"But his reputation seemed to be, from the public
point of view, that of a sports artist and he was
certainly much, much, much more than that. His works
ranged from sports images and panoramic landscapes
to huge oils and figurative works and just some
stunning works. Particularly in the last few years,
his work has expanded both in size and imagery."
In the 1980s, Danby prepared a series of
watercolours on the Americas Cup and the Canadian
athletes at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo.
He also served on the governing board of the
Canada Council and as a member of the Board of
Trustees of the National Gallery of Canada. McGee
said Danby, who continued to paint avidly, was on
the lookout for new inspiration while canoeing with
his wife, Gillian, in Ontario's pristine Algonquin
Park on Sunday.
"He died gathering information for more
paintings," said McGee, who remembered his friend as
"amenable, friendly, approachable, kind and
generous."
Danby was also touched by admirers of his work.
"When my painting, 'Acapulco,' was first
exhibited, I happened to be in the gallery one day
and observed a gentleman standing in front of it for
the longest time, seemingly lost in thought," he
once recalled. "Suddenly and quite unconsciously,
I'm sure, he concluded his absorption by rising up
on tip-toes, as if by doing so he just might be able
to see behind the diving board. What a compliment!"
Danby was a big supporter of the arts, and
frequently railed against the lack of arts education
in the public school system.
"The arts are just as important as math and
science in education, and just as important as any
other endeavour in our lives," he said. "Art is a
necessity. Art is an absolutely essential part of
our enlightenment process. We cannot, as a species,
as a civilized society, regard ourselves as being
enlightened without the arts."
In 1975, Danby was elected a member of the Royal
Canadian Academy of Arts. He was also been a
recipient of the Jessie Dow Prize, the 125th
Anniversary Commemorative Medal of Canada, the City
of Sault Ste. Marie's Award of Merit and both the
Queen's Silver and Golden Jubilee Medals.
In 2001, he was vested in both the Order of
Ontario and the Order of Canada.
Ontario provincial police say Danby collapsed
while canoeing on North Tea Lake. He was transported
by air ambulance to North Bay General Hospital where
he was pronounced dead.
He's survived by his wife and three sons.
The Canadian Press