JAMES GIRVAN was born in Cambridge Ontario, in 1942. He moved, in 1961, to Toronto to
study at the Ontario College of Art. In 1974 he moved to Manitoba and spends much of his
time in the wilderness areas of the Whiteshell and Nopiming. The move and the painting
and ideas of Ken Danby powerfully influenced his art. He began painting landscapes in a
realist manner in egg tempera and gouache.
He finds that egg tempera gives him a clarity of light and colour which suit the bright
sunlight, dry atmosphere and colours of Manitoba.
He attempts to convey an instinctive, spontaneous response to landscape; to give the
impression of a place, rather than a precise photographic image.He attempts to convey an
instinctive, spontaneous response to landscape.
When sketching he works directly with brush and paint, with no preliminary drawing, a
visceral approach rather than an intellectual one.
In the studio, using egg tempera he refines the image, adding a thoughtful element to the
image while still retaining the feel of the original sketch. Details are added from
memory and feelings to create the final image.
"The Whiteshell and Nopiming Provincial Parks are on the edge of the Canadian
Shield. They contain a magical, fragile world. Life clings tenaciously to their granite
rocks. I try to show that magic in my art so that others may see and experience it,
bringing a new understanding of the unity of our world and the importance of taking care
to protect and nurture the beauty of this planet "
Since 1990 James has been giving lectures on landscape painting in egg tempera to
interested groups. In 1991 and 1992 he was commissioned to do paintings for the Eaton
Place permanent Collection.
He is listed in the World Artists' Directory, is a member of ARTTrust a Network Of
Fine Artists, the Society of Tempera Painters and CultureNet.
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