Through African Canadian Eyes: Landscape Painting by Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century African Canadians

Author:

Adrienne Johnson

Cited Authors:
  • Carr, Lois Green, and Lorena S. Walsh - Economic Diversification and Labor Organization in the Chesapeake, 1620-1820
  • Chandler, Robert J. - San Francisco Lithographer: African American Artist, Grafton Tyler Brown
  • Clairmont, Donald H., and Magill, Dennis William - Africville: The Life and Death of a Canadian Black Community Third Edition
  • Clairmont, Donald - Africville An Historical Overview
  • Claremont, Donald H, and Dennis William Magill - Africville: The Life and Death of a Canadian Black Community, Third Edition
  • Dabel, Jane E. - A Respectable Woman: The Public Roles of African American Women in 19th-Century New York
  • Fatona, Andrea - Reading the Image: Poetics of the Black Diaspora
  • Gates, Jr., Henry Louis - Life Upon These Shores: Looking at African American History 1513-2008
  • Greenshields, E. B. - The Subjective View of Landscape Painting - with special reference to J. H, Weissenbruch, and Illustrations from his works in Canada
  • Gross, Ariela J. - What Blood Won't Tell: A History of Race on Trail
  • Harper, Russell J. - Painting in Canada: A History
  • Henry, Frances, Mattis, Winston, and Tator, Carol - Challenging Racism in the Arts: Case Studies of Controversy and Conflict
  • Hubbard, R. H. - Canadian Landscape Painting 1670-1930
  • Cheng, Keith C. - Demystifying Skin Color and 'Race'
  • Ketner II, Joseph D. - The Emergence of the African-American Artist: Robert S. Duncanson, 1821-1872
  • MacKay’s, Marilyn J. - Picturing the Land: Narrating Territories in Canadian Landscape Art, 1500-1950
  • McKenna, Brian - Melanoma Whitewash: Millions at Risk of Injury or Death because of Sunscreen Deceptions
  • McKittrick, Katherine and Woods, Clyde - No One Knows the Mysteries at the Bottom of the Ocean
  • Morgan, Marcyliena - Language, Discourse and Power in African American Culture
  • Mullin, Gerald W. - Flight and Rebellion: Slave Resistance in Eighteenth-Century Virginia
  • Mullings, Leith - Race and Globalization: Race from Below
  • Nelson, Charmaine - Representing the Black Female Subject in Western Art
  • Nelson, Charmaine - The Color of Stone: Sculpting the Black Female Subject in Nineteenth Century America
  • Ogborn, Miles; Withers, Charles W. J. - Georgian Geographies?
  • Pachai, Bridglal - Images of our Past: Historic Black Nova Scotia
  • Pachai, Bridglal - The Nova Scotia Black Experience Through the Centuries
  • Bristow, Peggy - Naming names, Naming Ourselves: A Survey of Early Black Women
  • Philip, M. Nourbese - Frontiers: Selected essays and writings on racism and culture 1984-1992
  • Reid, Denis - A Concise History of Canadian Painting
  • Richardson, Albert Edward - Georgian England Second Edition
  • Robart-Johnson, Sharon - Africa’s Children: A History of Blacks in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
  • Seifert, Charles C. - The Negro's or Ethiopian's Contribution to Art
  • Tolia-Kelly, Divya Praful - Landscape, Race and Memory: Material Ecologies of Citizenship
  • Walker, James W. St. - The Black Loyalists: The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone, 1783-1870
  • Whitfield, Harvey-Amani - Blacks on the Border: The Black Refugees in British North America, 1815-1860
  • Moore, Shirley Ann Wilson - Passing
  • Winant, Howard - The New Politics of Race: Globalism, Difference, Justice
  • Winks, Robin W. - The Blacks in Canada, A History
  • Wolcott, Victoria W. - Remaking Respectability: African American Women in Interwar Detroit
  • Da Breo, Hazel A - Royal spoils: the museum confronts its colonial past
  • Bernasconi, Robert - Crossed Lines in the Racialization Process: Race as a Border Concept
  • Mackey, Eva - Death by Landscape: Race, Nature and Gender in Canadian Nationalist Mythology
  • McKittrick, Katherine - On Plantations, Prisons, and a Black Sense of Place
  • Peake, Linda, and Ray, Brian - Racializing the Canadian landscape: whiteness, uneven geographies and social justice
  • Reid, Richard - Black British North American Sailors in the Civil War
  • Whitfield, Harvey Amani - Black Loyalists and Black Slaves in Maritime Canada
  • Jackson, Lewis M. - Those Remarkable McCarthy’s
  • Canadian Index of Wellbeing - How are Canadians Really Doing? The 2012 CIW Report
  • Johnston, A. J. B. - Mathieu Da Costa and Early Canada: Possibilities and Probabilities
  • Montreal Consortium for Human Rights Advocacy Training - Montreal Black Communities Demographic Project 2010: Demographic Challenges Facing The Black Community Of Montreal in the 21st Century vol. 3
  • Sadlier, Rosemary - Anti-Black Racism in Canada: A Historical Perspective
  • Statistics Canada - Ethnic Diversity Survey (EDS): portrait of a multicultural society
  • Biography.com - Solomon Northup
  • Black Loyalist - Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation
  • Black Loyalist.com - The Book of Negroes
  • Black Loyalist.com - The Philipsburg Proclamation
  • Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 - Shaping a Community: Black Refugees in Nova Scotia
  • Historica Canada - "Deemed Unsuitable": Black Pioneers in Western Canada
  • History Channel - Dunmore's Proclamation: A Time to Choose
  • History.com - Fugitive Slave Acts: 1850 Law
  • Huffington Post.ca - The Racist Truth About Canadian Immigration
  • Nova Scotia Archives - Book of Negroes
  • Nova Scotia Archives - Black Refugees, 1813-1834
  • Remembering the Black Loyalists - Who Were the Black Loyalists?
  • Nova Scotia Archives - Historical Vital Statistics, Death certificate of Edith Hester McDonald-Brown (1954)
  • Nova Scotia Archives - Marriage certificate of Thomas G. McDonald and Jessica (Jessie) Brown (1886)
  • USA Today - Canada's Underground Railroad sites show other half of the story
  • World Web Travel Guide - Destination Freedom: The History of the Underground Railroad in Canada
  • Mackenzie, Shelagh - Africville: 20 Years Later
  • Bishop, Henry - Interview with Dr. Henry Bishop of the Black Cultural Center for Nova Scotia, Halifax NS Halifax, Nova Scotia, (July 11, 2012)
  • Parker, Geraldine - Interview with Mrs. Geraldine Parker, Halifax NS Halifax, Nova Scotia, (July 12, 2012)
  • Woods, David - Interview with David Woods, Halifax NS Halifax, Nova Scotia, (July 14, 2012)
Abstract:

This thesis focuses on landscape as artistic genre and site in relation to African Canadian cultural belonging and agency as fine artists and Canadian citizens at the turn of the twentieth century. Attending to aspects of racialization in Canadian art in which landscape is considered both as geopolitical territory and as the hallmark subject matter, it specifically examines how African Canadian artists navigated racialized spaces – landscapes of psychic and lived Black violence – when African Canadians were systematically positioned outside the imagined and physical constructs of the nation. The period covered is from 1760 until 1910 when a shift occurred artistically and ideologically in Black culture, underscored by a desire for African Unity and greater access and participation in North American economic, cultural, and political society.

Historical records have long relegated African Canadians to an underclass, representing them as non-actors or non-participants in Canadian art history. This thesis compares and contrasts the lives and work of two African Canadian landscape artists, George Henry McCarthy (1860-1906; Shelburne, NS) and Edith Hester McDonald-Brown (ca.1880-1954; Africville, Halifax, NS) to examine and document their artistic contributions to early Canadian art history. Section One provides a historiography of Canadian landscape as art and territory between 1760 and 1900, focusing on its psychic and physical aspects. It situates the lived experiences of African Canadians within the geographical territory known as Canada, exploring how land (and freedom) was wielded as a weapon of disenfranchisement against African Canadians. Section Two presents the first of the two case studies: the life and work of George Henry McCarthy. This section examines how, if at all, McCarthy’s African and White mixed race heritage influenced his art making and lived experience in Canada. Section Three presents the second case study on the life and work of Edith Hester McDonald (later Brown) to provide a historical point-of-departure to examine Black women’s access to professionalization in the visual arts in early Canada. I propose McCarthy as the earliest known African Canadian male artist, and McDonald as the first known African Canadian woman artist in art history.

The thesis concludes by summarizing the correlation between place, belonging and the representation of African Canadian as artists, in the teaching and display of Canadian art.

Acknowledgements:

This thesis would not have been possible without the support and assistance of several persons. First, my profound thanks to my thesis supervisor, Dr. Alice Ming Wai Jim, whose mentorship, support and insights have been invaluable throughout this process, my development as a scholar, and personal growth. My thanks also to Dr. Kristina Huneault, my reader, for her thoughtful recommendations and assistance. I also extend thanks to the dedicated staff and faculty of Concordia University’s Department of Art History.

Research is never a solitary undertaking, so it is with deep gratitude I express my thanks and appreciation to the following persons for their assistance, passion and dedication, particularly in the area of African Canadian history: Dr. Charmaine A. Nelson (McGill University), Sunday Miller (Africville Museum; Halifax, NS), The Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia (Halifax, NS), Garry Shutlak (Nova Scotia Archives; Halifax, NS), Debi Hill and Ashley McDaniel (Black Loyalist Heritage Society; Birchtown, NS), David Woods (Halifax, NS), Crystal Martin (Dartmouth Heritage Museum; Dartmouth, NS), Joey Yazer (Halifax, NS) and Shawn Parker (Halifax, NS), Leah Griffiths (Shelburne County Museum), Dr. Andrea Fatona (OCAD, ON), Deanna Bowen (Toronto, ON), Shannon Prince and Spencer Alexander (Buxton National Historic Site and Museum; Buxton, ON), Lana Talbot (Windsor, ON), and the staff of the Amherstburg Freedom Museum (Amherstburg, ON).

A special thanks to Geraldine Parker (Halifax, NS), who warmly opened her home to me so I could learn about her family history, particularly, her grandmother, Edith Hester McDonald-Brown. Every conversation I had with you (Geraldine) impresses upon me the importance of knowledge and sharing it, the wealth of wisdom, and the power love and grace.

To my mother, Pearl, my husband Michael, my brother Lawrence, my sister Elona and Eleanor Kogan words can never capture how pivotal your encouragement, generosity, love and patience were to my university studies and growth. I love you!