Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T20:41:14.118Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Grist to the mill: folk art in the Atlantic Region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Susan M. Foshay*
Affiliation:
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Get access

Abstract

Literature on folk art of the Atlantic region, with few exceptions, would be nonexistent without the intervention of visual arts institutions and museums. The interest in folk art and folk art collecting by museums and galleries, and the institutions’ penchant for documentation, has generated a diversity of written and visual material on the subject, of both an historical and a contemporary nature, which unveils a regional portrait of artists and their work.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Field, Richard Henning. Spirit of Nova Scotia: traditional decorative folk art 1780 to 1930. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia; Toronto: Dundurn, 1985.Google Scholar
2. Folk art of Nova Scotia. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, [1976].Google Scholar
3. Nova Scotia folk art: Canada’s cultural heritage, Canada House, Canadian Cultural Centre, 22 November 1989-19 January 1990. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 1989; Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Nimbus, 1995.Google Scholar
4. Joe Sleep retrospective. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 1981.Google Scholar
5. Francis Silver, 1841-1920: an exhibition of paintings and murals by a Nova Scotia folk artist. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 1982.Google Scholar
6. Young, Deborah A. A record for time: an exhibition of decorated family and individual records, memorials, tokens of friendship and embroidered memorials and samplers produced in Nova Scotia prior to 1900. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, c1985.Google Scholar
7. Greenaway, Cora. Interior decorative painting in Nova Scotia: an exhibition surveying decorated interiors of private and public buildings in Nova Scotia since 1810, including artifacts, artworks and photodocumentation = Peinture décorative d’intérieur en Nouvelle-Ecosse: une exposition d’objets d’art et de documents photographiques illustrant la décoration intérieure de résidences et d’édifices publics de la Nouvelle-Ecosse depuis 1810. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, c1986.Google Scholar
9. Baker, Victoria. The Croscups’ painted parlour. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada, 1990.Google Scholar
9. Robson, Scott and Sharon, MacDonald. Old Nova Scotian quilts. Halifax: Nova Scotia Museum: Nimbus, 1995.Google Scholar
10. Foshay, Susan. Deanne Fitzpatrick hooked mats: one for sorrow, two for joy. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 1996.Google Scholar
11. Woolaver, Lance and Bob, Brooks. The illuminated life of Maud Lewis. Halifax: Nimbus: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 1996.Google Scholar
12. Gratton, Patricia. Flights of fancy: Newfoundland yard art. St John’s, Nfld.: Art Gallery, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1983.Google Scholar
13. Les arts populaires acadiens de l’Ile-du-Prince-Edouard = Acadian folk art of Prince Edward Island. Charlottetown: The Prince Edward Island Heritage Foundation: La Société Saint-Thomas d’Aquin, 1982.Google Scholar
14. Faulds, Vetta LaPointe. The way it was along my bay: Nash Creek and Jacquet River. Vol. 1. Fredericton: Rhyme for Reason, 1995.Google Scholar
15. ’Twas ever thus: a selection of eastern Canadian folk art. Toronto: M. F. Feheley Publishers, 1979.Google Scholar
16. An exhibition of Canadian gameboards of the 19th & 20th Centuries from Ontario, Quebec & Nova Scotia. Halifax: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, c1981.Google Scholar
17. Foshay, Susan, Pascale, Galipeau and Nancy, Tousley. Welcome to our world: contemporary Canadian folk art. Kleinburg: McMichael Canadian Art Collection, c1996.Google Scholar
18. Eyland, Cliff and Susan, Gibson Garvey. Uses of the vernacular in contemporary Nova Scotian art. Halifax: Dalhousie Art Gallery, 1994.Google Scholar