The AGB has one of the largest collections of original paintings by Oscar Schlienger – many of which were donated by the executor of Oscar’s estate – Alfred Muma.Our collection includes two styles: landscapes and figures.
Schlienger was born in Basel, Switzerland in 1905 and received training at ttion of murals in the Canadian Pavilion at the 1939 World’s Fair in Chicago.Being an art teacher always seemed to be at the forefront of Schlienger’s life. During the war years, he taught classes alongside A. Y. Jackson and Charles Comfort. He also started creating editorial cartoons for The Globe and Mail newspaper. In 1942, he briefly drew some graphic stories for Bell Features Publications. He created two short series, “Lucky, the Unbeatable, and his Sport-Escapades”, that began in Joke Comics. His second feature, again in Joke Comics, was the adventures of Colonel Braggart, which ran from 1942 to January 1943.
After the war ended in 1950, Schlienger became an instructor for the Ontario Group of Artists at Gordon Payne’s Studio in Toronto. That year, he and his wife Suzanne moved to Peterborough, where he continued his passion for teaching at the Haliburton School of Fine Art, Sir Sanford Fleming College and evening classes at North Hastings High School. His work for a twenty year period at his studio in Peterborough, which was perhaps his most fruitful period of painting. In 1959 he was unanimously elected to the prestigious Ontario Institute of Painters, which included among its members former Canadian war-time comics artist Adrian Dingle. In 1970, three years after the death of his wife, Schlienger moved to Bancroft. He died on Remembrance Day 1991 at the age of 87.
Primary Source: Ivan Kocmarek
“I am concerned with the spirit, rather than the surface. I have spent my life in pursuit of the human spirit, in the hope of giving it some form of visual expression. To this end I have practiced my painting and portraiture in many media and in a wide variety of cultures and settings. With each piece, I have tried to come closer to recognizing that special spark that resides in each of us.”
John Parson was born in Toronto in 1947. After graduating with honours from the Ontario College of Art in 1970, he was awarded the Mclean Foundation Travelling Scholarship. He worked and studied in Europe including Montmartre from 1972 to 1975, and studied old-master techniques with a Louvre copyist in Paris.
His travels also included North Africa, the Middle East, the Far East, US., Australia, New Zealand and Japan. In 1976 he moved to New Zealand with his wife to be, and became a dual citizen.Parson had a number of shows in New Zealand in the 70s and 80s. His work has been shown continuously in Queenstown NZ since 1980.
Parson returned to Canada in 2004 to be close to his aging parents. In 2009, he hosted a solo exhibition at the ABG. Until moving back to New Zealand, Parson was the artist-in-residence at Grail Springs Retreat and Wellness Centre, near Bancroft.
Charitable Registration #: 81973 7750 RR0001. All images reproduced on this site are provided free of charge for research and/or private study purpose only. Any other use, distribution or reproduction thereof without the express permission of the copyright holder, is subject to limitations imposed by law. Any commercial exploitation of the images is strictly prohibited.
The Art Gallery of Bancroft is situated on the traditional territory of the Anishinaabeg Algonquins, which is known to be unceded. Indigenous people have been stewards of this land since time immemorial; as such we honour and respect their connection to the land, its plants, animals and stories. Our recognition of the contributions and historic importance of Indigenous peoples is sincerely aligned to our collective commitment to make the promise and the challenge of truth and reconciliation real in our community.