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Accueil > Sources historiques > Base de données bio-bibliographiques historiques sur les artistes canadiennes > OSITHE, Sister Mary (Osithe Elizabeth Labossière)

Base de données d'artistes

OSITHE, Sister Mary (Osithe Elizabeth Labossière)

Naissance
Sorel, Quebec, 1867
Décès
Victoria, British Columbia, 1941
Notice biographique
A woman of many talents, Sister Osithe practised painting (both on canvas and china), drawing and, perhaps most notably, architecture. Brought to Victoria from Montreal in 1897 to teach art at St. Ann's Academy where she remained for forty years, she was an enthusiastic and much beloved teacher, keeping the art studio open all day long to encourage her students to feel at ease. Her own works, religious in subject matter, graced the walls of the Academy and included versions of "Crib" and "The Immaculate Conception" both based on works by Baroque artist Bartolomez Esteban Murillo. In 1903, Osithe returned to Montreal to continue her artistic training at the Mother House in Lachine. There she completed copies of Millet's "Reapers" and Hoffman's "Rich Young Man," in addition to some original works, such as "Building the Card House." When she returned to Victoria, she participated in the Academy's Annual Exhibitions and attracted a certain amount of publicity for her works. Soon, she was teaching art classes to fashionable ladies of Victoria society, thus generating income for the Academy and nurturing interest in art through various activities. Her architectural projects included a gymnasium of the Academy (1921) and a new wing for Little Flower Academy, a school in Vancouver. She also contributed to designs for other schools and hospitals under the Sisters of St. Ann in British Columbia. When the Academy closed in 1973, Osithe's paintings were moved to other locations; some can be found at the St. Ann's Residence.
Médias
Architecture
Calligraphy
China painting
Painting
Photography
Etudes
Congegration Sisters of Saint Anne (Lachine)
Lieux de conservation des dossiers et archives
National Gallery of Canada, ON - Library and Archives
Canadian Women Artists History Initiative Documentation Centre, QC
BIBLIOGRAPHIE

Documents sur l'artiste
"Painting with Precision." Times-Colonist (Victoria) 28 Jun. 2004: B2.
Amos, Robert. "A Woman's Place Defined." Times-Colonist (Victoria) 7 Oct. 2004: D8.
Amos, Robert. "On Art: The Glories of St. Ann's." Times-Colonist (Victoria) 28 Dec. 1997: 1.
Amos, Robert. "Sisters of St. Ann’s Art Offers a Glimpse into Victoria’s Past." Times Colonist (Victoria) 16 Aug. 2013.
Blake, Joseph. "Music Celebrates Start of Advent at St. Ann's." Times-Colonist (Victoria) 25 Nov. 2004: D12.
Coppin, Rhianon. "Ground-breaking Architect Designed Academy Building." Vancouver Sun 18 Nov. 2004: A18.
Finlay, K.A. and Shea, T.. "A Woman's Place" Art and the Role of Women in the Cultural Formation of Victoria B.C. 1850s-1920s Victoria, B.C.: Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery, University of Victoria, 2004.
Lepine, Ayla. "The St. Ann's Academy Art Studio." BC Historical News: Journal of British Columbia Historical Federation 35.4 (Fall 2002): 15-7.
Luxton, Donald. Building the West: Early Architects of British Columbia. Vancouver: Talonbooks, 2007.
Milne Martens, Margaret and Chalmers, Graeme. "Educating the Eye, Hand and Heart at St. Ann's Academy: A Case Study of Art Education for Girls in Nineteenth Century Victoria." BC Studies 144 (Winter 2004/2005): 31-59.
Murphy, Patrick. "St. Ann's Academy - Restoring Faith." Times-Colonist (Victoria) 5 Dec. 1997: 1.
Tuele, Nicholas, and Christina Johnson-Dean. British Columbia Women Artists, 1885-1985 Victoria: Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, 1985.

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