Listed Canadian Artist: 1904-1997
Rare Colour Woodcut: Signed and titled
Title: “Old Grist Mill” Ca. 1950
Pencil Signed: Carl Martin
Studied under: Homer Watson RCA. and Carl von Ahrens OSA, ARCA.
Image Size: w: 5.75 in. by h: 7.75 in.
Condition: pristine and original, with no condition issues.
Frame & Glass: Archivally framed with acid-free materials throughtout. The glass is silicone set, which also provides a waterproof splash barrier.
Artist Files Location: National Gallery of Canada - Library and Archives / Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography / City of Peterborough Archives.
Back of Frame: Tight flush paper cover back with inner foam core protection and felt bumpers.
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Interesting Note: Carl Percy Martin, may not be a nationally known artist, but he was a well known and respected 20th century Peterborough Ontario artist and printmaker, whose hand-pulled prints rarely come onto the vintage fine print marketplace. This specific coloured woodcut by Carl is quite well done and it's on par with some of the finest woodblock prints created by members of the Group of Seven and their printmaking comtemporaries. It was created by using at least six separate woodcut blocks, one for each colour in the print. Carl also created a few etchings over the years, but it's his coloured woodcuts that stand out as being special, both for their Canadian subject matter, their composition and for their colour palette. While living in the Galt area of Ontario, Carl was a student and friend of two important early Canadian artists, Carl von Ahrens & Homer Watson.
Carl Percy Martin was born in 1917 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Eventually, his family moved to the Millbrook, Ontario area when he was a young boy. Carl began his career in commercial art and graphic design at his uncle's business, the Tinney Carriage Works, where he apprenticed under the resident carriage artist and painted decorated horse-drawn carriages. After high school, he moved to Toronto and worked for several years as a label and textile graphic designer. Carl also worked in other studios as a textile artist for catalogues prior to the Second World War. Martin went on to work freelance for several large Canadian firms, creating logos, trademarks, and commercial labels. Eventually, Carl Martin decided to open his own freelance studio in the Galt area of western Ontario.
While living in this area in his late teens, he studied with two noted Canadian artists, Homer Watson (1855-1936) and Carl von Ahrens (1863-1936). At both of their suggestions, Carl submitted one of his paintings to the Lord Wellington Prize competition at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa and won first prize. And it was not to be his last win in exhibitions. Around 1939, his house and studio were destroyed by fire, and he and his family returned to the Peterborough area. Carl then began an industrial design business. Martin won contracts with the Canadian government to design textiles and patterns for army uniform badges.
After Carl Martin's death, a large amount of written material came into the possession of his daughter, who then contacted the City of Peterborough Archives in August 1998 about making a donation, and the Archivist followed up with a site visit in September. The collection consists of papers related primarily to Millbrook commercial artist and graphic designer, Carl Percy Martin (1904-1997). Included are a series of personal correspondence from Carl Martin to his parents, John and Lillian, where Martin is keeping them posted on his efforts to secure a job in Peterborough; a series of personal correspondence or 'love letters' (1900-1902) from a William J. Brown - foreman with the Durham Telephone Company to Carl's mother Lillian Hutchinson of Cavan; a small series of letters from Canadian artist Carl Ahrens to his pupil and friend Carl Martin from 1931 to 1935; also examples of Carl Martin's graphic design work - including colorful greeting cards and displays containing provincial and national emblems from circa 1920.
There was also a 1990 published work by Carl Martin entitled, "Like It or Lump It," in which Carl provides an autobiography made up of artful sketches, poetry, recollections of life, along with a few of his insightful opinion pieces.
Carl Percy Martin, noted Peterborough artist, passed away in 1997 at the age of 93.
Print Ref No: 3NOX22GAR-S/BOEX
Updated July 5, 2024 |
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