Milne, David

حقل المعرف الفريد

نوع المدخل

Person

شكل معتمد من الاسم

Milne, David

شكل (أشكال) متوازية من الاسم

    صيغ موحدة للاسم وفقًا لقواعد أخرى

      أشكال أخرى من الاسم

        المُعرِّفات الخاصة بالهيئات الاعتبارية

        منطقة بيانات التسجيلة الوصفية

        تواريخ الوجود

        1882-1953

        التاريخ

        David Brown Milne (Burgoyne, Ontario 1882 – Bancroft, Ontario 1953) was a painter and etcher; he is widely considered to be among the most outstanding Canadian artists. He worked as a schoolteacher before deciding to study painting in New York where, in 1903, he enrolled in the Art Students’ League. Milne supported himself through commercial artwork but actively and successfully developed his own painting, exhibiting five canvases in the famous Armory Show of 1913. His friends during this period included James (“René”) Clarke, with whom he maintained a correspondence for many years. In 1916, Milne and his wife Patsy (née May Frances Hagerty), whom he had married in 1912, left the city and settled in Boston Corners, New York. In late 1917 Milne joined the Canadian army as a private, and in 1918 was appointed as a war artist to record the locations of battles that had involved Canadian troops. Milne returned to Boston Corners in 1919, where he spent most of his winters until 1928, summering in the Adirondacks. He moved to Ottawa for one year in 1923, when the National Gallery of Canada bought six of his watercolours. In 1928, Milne moved permanently back to Ontario (he separated from his wife in 1933), spending extended periods of time alone in the wilderness regions north of Toronto. Palgrave, a short drive from Toronto, became Milne’s home from 1930 to 1933, and from 1933 to 1939 he lived in a cabin on Six Mile Lake near Georgian Bay. He maintained an interest in the Toronto art scene and developed a small group of patrons including Alice and Vincent Massey, and Douglas Duncan of the Picture Loan Society, who acted as Milne’s agent and dealer for many years. He met his second wife Kathleen Pavey in 1938 and lived with her from 1939; their only child David Jr. was born in 1941. The Milnes lived in Uxbridge from 1940 to 1946. From 1947 Milne lived and worked at Baptiste Lake, with Kathleen and David Jr. joining him periodically. As Milne’s health deteriorated, the family moved to Bancroft to be closer to Baptiste Lake. Milne died at Bancroft in December 1953. His work is represented in numerous public collections, notably the National Gallery of Canada, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection and the Winnipeg Art Gallery.

        أماكنالأماكن

        Burgoyne, Ontario (birth)
        Bancroft, Ontario (death)

        الوضع القانوني

        وظائف، مهن، وأنشطة

        التفويضات / مصادر السلطة

        البنية الداخلية / شجرة النسب

        السياق العام

        نطاق حقول بيانات العلاقات

        نطاق حقول نقاط الوصول

        نقاط الوصول الموضوعية

        مداخل الوصول (أماكن)

        مِهن

        Artist

        ملاحظة

        Milne was a painter and an etcher

        حقل الضبط

        معرف ملف الضبط الاستنادي

        AGOAC0012

        تم إصلاحها بواسطة

        معرف المؤسسة

        ON00012

        القواعد و/أو الاتفاقيات المستخدمة

        الحالة

        Final

        حالة الوصف

        Partial

        تواريخ الإنشاء والمراجعة والحذف

        August 9, 2013

        اللغة (اللغات)

        • الانجليزية

        الملفات النصية

          المصادر

          Canadiana Authorities

          ملاحظات الصيانة