Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Lawren Harris: Where the Universe Sings


Where the Universe Sings:
The Spiritual Journey of Lawren Harris


Canada / 2016 / 91 min. /  English


The film is partially based on a book by James King Inward Journey: The Life of Lawren Harris

This film is for those who love the Canadian painters from the Group of Seven, and also for those who know nothing about Canadian Art and would be astonished to discover the great artistic creations of Lawren Harris, the founder of the Group of Seven.

Having come from a prosperous, the end of the 19th century Toronto industrialist background, yet from his early age, Lawren Harris was destined to become an artist rather than a businessmen. Nevertheless, he ultimately become heir to the Massey-Harris farm machinery fortune. He had used his family funds not only to advance his elegant way of living, but also to support artistic aspirations of talented artists who later became known as a Group of Seven (a term coined by him) as well as their associates. Harris financed railway trips for the Group of Seven artists to the Algoma region to paint the Canadian north, and later to Lake Superior, Rockie mountains, and other regions. It was also largely thanks to Harris' idea, funds, and energy, that a Studio Building was raised in Toronto from a decapitated house, and became a home and working studio for several members of the Group of Seven painters, their predecessors, and their artistic descendants. This location had been of such a significance to the Canadian art that in 2005 the building was designated a National Historic Site of Canada under the Ontario Heritage Act.

The film is not only a biographical narrative, it focuses on what art represented to Harris, his complex perception of life, meaning, and his understanding of art in terms of spirituality. It also presents his writings and poems, especially those passages that illuminate the workings of his creative impulse, his searchings, and his artistic journey. Harris was not satisfied to only create on canvas beautiful and colourful shapes that captured the Canadian northern wilderness, but to make with each of his paintings a spiritual statement, a revelation, a portrayal of a spiritual truth.

In 1969, Lawren Harris was made a Companion of the Order of Canada.

I highly recommend this film. It will be playing in the cinemas in the near future, so watch for it in the upcoming cinema schedules.


PRODUCTION TEAM

Country of Origin: Canada
Executive Producer: Peter Raymont
Producer: Peter Raymont, Nancy Lang
Cinematographer: John Westheuser
Editor: Cathy Gulkin
Music: John Welsman
Production Company: White Pine Pictures

Produced with the generous permission of Stewart Sheppard, grandson of and executor for Lawren Harris.

Produced in association with TVO, documentary Channel, YES TV with the participation of the Ontario Media Development Corporation, the Rogers Group of Funds, the Bell Fund, the Canada Media Fund


FILM TRAILER

On Vimeo

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