Gordon Edward Pfeiffer

Gordon Edward Pfeiffer (October 10, 1899 – May 25, 1983) was a Canadian master dyer and painter.[1][2]

Biography

Early life

Gordon Edward Pfeiffer was born in Quebec City in 1899. He was the child of Adolph Pfeiffer and Lily Wright. He attended Misses Bonhams' school, the Boys High School, Stanstead Wesleyan College and studied chemistry and economics at Harvard for two summers.[3]

Later life

Pfeiffer married Dorothy Pfeiffer (née Douglas Young), a musician and former art critic for the Montreal Gazette, in June 1925 after a short courtship. It is unclear how many children Pfeiffer had, in Aimers's biography it is mentioned "Pfeiffer now had a family of six to support" with Gordon Jr., Douglas, Helen and Bruce being named in the book.[4]

Exhibitions

Spring Exhibitions at the Art Association of Montreal

Pfeiffer would exhibit his works Spring Exhibitions of the Art Association of Montreal (now Montreal Museum of Fine Arts) from 1928 to 1954.[5] In McMann's catalogue of paintings exhibited by Pfeiffer his asking price for his works range from $50.00 for Pumpkin season, 1933 ($882.64 in 2016 dollars adjusted for inflation) to $600.00 for Barley harvest, 1942 ($8,765.52 in 2016 dollars). The last painting he would exhibit at the Spring Exhibitions, Summer, Baie des Chaleurs had an asking price of $300.00 ($2,704.26 in 2016 dollars).[6]

Group Exhibitions

Solo Exhibitions

Notable patrons

Cotton Aimers' bibliography and catalogue raisonné Gordon E. Pfeiffer in collaboration with the painter himself documents a rich source of art dealers and patrons that have supported Pfeiffer throughout his career.

Corinne "Coco" Dupuis-Maillet

Dupuis-Maillet is described as a fellow-artist that helped Pfeiffer break into the Montreal artistic community as he moved to Westmount in the mid-Forties. She would take him under her wings and purchase dozens of his paintings and make the introductions he needed to get noticed.[7]

Max Stern (Dominion Gallery of Fine Art)

Dr. Max Stern of the landmark Dominion Gallery of Fine Art (1941–2000) in Montreal was one Pfeiffer's earliest supporters during the phase of his life when he started painting landscapes.[8] In the Max Stern Collection, a collection of items bequested at Dr. Stern's death to a joint collaborative effort between Concordia University and McGill University is a copy of Pfeiffer's biography and catalogue raisonné entitled Gordon E. Pfeiffer by Cotton Aimers. It contained a business card laid in of Dr. W. M. Pfeiffer. It is unclear what relation Dr. W. M. Pfeiffer had to Gordon Pfeiffer.[9]

Major Institutions and Corporations

Cotton Aimers documents that as Pfeiffer established himself as an artist in the Sixties, large corporations such as Hydro-Québec, Industrial Acceptance Corporation, Kilborn Engineering (now a part of SNC-Lavalin) and Molson Brewery (now Molson-Coors) started acquiring his works for their boardrooms. Andrew Sidney Dawes purchased ten of his paintings and presented them to McGill University. The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts also owns one of his paintings.

Other notable patrons

Other notable art galleries

References

  1. "Gordon E. Pfeiffer". Canadian Heritage Information Network. Government of Canada. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  2. Aimers. 1981.
  3. Aimers. 1981.
  4. Aimers. 1981.
  5. McMann. 1981. p. 305
  6. McMann. 1988. p. 305
  7. Aimers. 1981.
  8. Aimers. 1981.
  9. "Gordon E. Pfeiffer". Concordia Libraries. Concordia University. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  10. Aimers. 1981.
  11. "Généalogie Johanne Parent". Généalogie du Québec et d'Amérique française. Nos Origines. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  12. Aimers. 1981.
  13. "Watson Art Galleries fonds". National Gallery of Canada, Library and Archives. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 17 April 2016.

Sources

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