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Harold Beament

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Harold Beament
Born
Thomas Harold Beament

(1898-07-23)July 23, 1898
Ottawa,Canada
DiedMay 13, 1984(1984-05-13)(aged 85)[1]
Montreal,Canada
EducationEvening life classes withJ.W. Beattyat theOntario College of Art,Toronto
Occupation(s)Painter, graphic artist
AwardsMember of theRoyal Canadian Academy(ARCA 1936, RCA 1947, Pres. 1964-67)

Harold BeamentRCA(known also asThomas Harold Beament) (July 23, 1898 – May 13, 1984) was anOfficial Second World War artistwith theRoyal Canadian Navyand held the highest service rank of any Canadian artist in theSecond World War– of Commander.[2]He was noted for the treatment of his depictions in his paintings of landscape and figures in landscape and graphic work, described as "descriptive realism" by some authors.[3]

Career

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Beament was born inOttawaand attended primary and secondary schools there. He enrolled atOsgoode Hallin Toronto in 1916. On account of World War I, Beament interrupted his studies to join theRoyal Canadian NavyVolunteer Reserve (RCNVR). He served first as an ordinary seaman, followed by a promotion to warrant officer. After the end of the war Beament returned toOsgoode Halland graduated as a lawyer in 1922. In the same year he began to attend evening life classes withJ.W. Beattyat theOntario College of Artin Toronto.[2]Beament, continued to serve with the peacetime Naval Reserve and was promoted to the rank of officer in 1924. After he had moved to Montreal in 1926, he was promoted to Lieutenant Commander, Montreal RCNVR Division in 1930.[3]

Beament held his first important solo show at the Watson Art Gallery in Montreal and continued to exhibit with the gallery until 1939. Beament became a good friend of gallery ownerWilliam R. Watson,as both men had served in the Navy.[4]He also exhibited regularly in theMontreal Museum of Fine ArtSpring Shows and theRoyal Canadian Academy of Arts(RCA) Annual Shows. In 1935, Beament won the Jessie Dow Prize at theMontreal Museum of Fine ArtSpring Show.[3]

Beament taught art at the Montreal Museum of Fine Art School in 1936 and privately from 1936 to 1957. At the outbreak of WWII, Beament entered full-time service with the RCNVR, as a commander of minesweepers and escort vessels on North Atlantic patrols (1939-1943). He rose in rank to Commander in 1943, then as official Canadian war artist, painted scenes at sea till 1947. TheCanadian War Museumhas some 76 paintings by Beament. He was awarded the Auxiliary Forces Officer's Decoration in 1943.[3][4]

Following his retirement from the Naval Reserve in 1947, Beament resumed his full-time career as a professional painter. He held two solo shows atLaing Galleries,Toronto in 1948 and 1949 and painted a wide variety of subjects while travelling extensively.[4]In the Canadian North he painted scenes of the Inuit, made into prints bySampson Matthews.[5]One Inuit figure by Beament can be seen on a 1955 ten cent stamp that he designed for the Canadian Postal Service (nowCanada Post). These lithograph prints of Inuit were used by theQueen Elizabeth Hotel,Montreal.[4]

Beament is represented in the following notable public collections:National Gallery of Canada;[6]Canadian War Museum;[7]McMichael Canadian Art Collection;[8]Art Gallery of Hamilton;[9]Museum London,[10]Ontario; and elsewhere.[3]He was a member of theRoyal Canadian Academy(ARCA 1936, RCA 1947, Pres. 1964–1967)[11]and a member of theCanadian Society of Graphic Art(1926-1928), the Arts Club, Montreal, and Pen & Pencil Club, Montreal. He was also an Honorary Member of the Chelsea Arts Club in London, England.[4]Beament died in Montreal, in 1985. He is the father of artist, Tib Beament.[4]

A fonds of his material is atLibrary and Archives Canadacontaining drawings made on his arctic trip.,[12][13]

References

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  1. ^"Beament, Harold".Government of Quebec.2013.Retrieved8 February2023.
  2. ^abMurray, Joan (1981).Canadian Artists of the Second World War.Oshawa: Robert McLaughlin Gallery. p. 30.Retrieved23 July2022.
  3. ^abcdeA Dictionary of Canadian Artists, volumes 1-8 by Colin S. MacDonald, and volume 9 (online only), by Anne Newlands and Judith Parker National Gallery of Canada / Musée des beaux-arts du Canada
  4. ^abcdef"Harold Beament".www.klinkhoff.ca.Alan Klinkhoff Gallery, Montreal.Retrieved24 July2022.
  5. ^"Thomas Harold Beament".www.sampsonmatthewsprints.com.Sampson Matthews.Retrieved24 July2022.
  6. ^"Harold Beamrnt".www.gallery.ca.National Gallery of Canada.Retrieved24 July2022.
  7. ^"Collection".www.warmuseum.ca.Canadian War Museum.Retrieved24 July2022.
  8. ^Murray, Joan (2006).McMichael Canadian Art Collection: One Hundred Masterworks.Kleinburg, Ontario: McMichael Canadian Art Collection. p. 20.Retrieved24 July2022.
  9. ^"Collection".tms.artgalleryofhamilton.com.Art Gallery of Hamilton.Retrieved24 July2022.
  10. ^"Collection".collection.museumlondon.ca.Museum London, Ontario.Retrieved24 July2022.
  11. ^McMann, Evelyn (1981).Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Retrieved24 July2022.
  12. ^"Thomas Harold Beament fonds".recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca.Library and Archives Canada.Retrieved24 July2022.
  13. ^"Collection".www.canada.ca.Library and Archives Canada.Retrieved24 July2022.
Cultural offices
Preceded by President of theRoyal Canadian Academy of Arts
1964-1967
Succeeded by