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Art

Victoria Park

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Victoria Park

CA$400.00

Title: Victoria Park, P.E. Island
Artist: Helen Haszard
Image size: 4” in diameter
Page size: 7” x 6”
Description: Watercolor. Signed bottom right. Titled on reverse.

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Helen Marguerite Haszard (1890-1970) was born in Charlottetown. She received her first art lessons from the Catholic sisters and grew up to be an independent, self-supporting artist. At the age of 12, while convalescing from pneumonia, she began studying art at Notre Dame Convent. Her passion for painting and outdoor sketching became the driving force of her life. She studied art in Boston from 1912 to 1913 and later, in Ontario, under a renowned art teacher named J. W. Beatty. During the 1920s and 1930s, Haszard kept a studio and taught painting in Toronto. But from June to September she would return to Cavendish to paint, sell her work, and gather art commissions for the winter. Her watercolour scenes of Prince Edward Island were popular with both Islanders and tourists alike. The influence of the Group of Seven and J. W. Beatty can be seen in Haszard’s strong sense of composition and design, and the vivid use of colour. In fact, it was this use of colour that cost her the job of illustrator for her friend L.M. Montgomery’s books. The publisher claimed her sunsets were unreal and the colour of the Island soil untrue.

Victoria Park is Charlottetown's largest park, located on the waterfront and named for Queen Victoria. It features a variety of amenities, including a 1.2 km waterfront boardwalk, tennis courts, ball fields, a swimming pool, and a playground with an accessible splash pad. The park also has significant historical elements, such as the Prince Edward Battery, survey stones marking the meridional line, and the historic Government House - also known as Fanningbank.