Celebrated Nova Scotia artist Tom Forrestall dies at age 88 - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Celebrated Nova Scotia artist Tom Forrestall dies at age 88

Forrestall won critical acclaim in the 1960s as part of a renewed interest in realist painting. His work can be found in major public and private collections across North America.

'He was an artist's artist,' says writer and curator Ray Cronin

Celebrated Nova Scotia artist Tom Forrestall dies at age 88

5 hours ago
Duration 5:19
Forrestall won critical acclaim in the 1960s as part of a renewed interest in realist painting. His work can be found in major public and private collections across North America. Art curator Ray Cronin speaks to Amy Smith about Forrestall's legacy.

Tom Forrestall, the Nova Scotia artist who won critical acclaim in the 1960s as part of a renewed interest in realist painting, has died at the age of 88.

Forrestall, whose workcan be found in major public and private collections across North America and Europe, was "an artist's artist," said writer and curator Ray Cronin.

"He was somebody who was generous with his time, somebody who worked constantly. He was a full-time painter since 1960, that's how he made his living. That's a very hard thing to do anywhere, but especially in Atlantic Canada," Cronintold CBC Nova Scotia News in an interviewFriday.

"He was a model for other artistsfor integrity and for how you can actually go and succeed and make a living as an artist, and keep true to your own ideals and your own work."

One of Forrestall'sbest-known works,Island in the Ice, hangs permanently at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.The painting, which is nearly two metres across, depicts Devils Islandin Halifax harbour surrounded by ice floes.

realistic looking painting of white ice surrounding an island
Island in the Ice, one of Tom Forrestall's best-known paintings, hangs at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia. It depicts Devils Island in Halifax harbour surrounded by ice floes. (Tom Forrestall)

Forrestall was born in Middleton, N.S., in 1936. While studying art at New Brunswick'sMount Allison University, he was taught byiconic Canadian painterAlex Colville, who died in Wolfville, N.S., in 2013.

"It was [Forrestall]and Mary Pratt and Christopher Pratt. They were all students of Alex Colville, and they created a way of painting based in Atlantic Canada that was really unique in the whole country. They were really among the best-known artists from the 1960s right through the present day in Canada," Cronin said.

Cronin said Colville taught Forrestallhow to paint with egg tempura paints, where powdered pigment is mixed with egg yolks,which dry clear.

"It's a very old style, a very old technique, it goes back to the Middle Ages. But Tom loved it and he used it for 60 years," he said.

WATCH|Tom Forrestall sketchbooks reveal painstakingartist at work:

Legendary artist Tom Forrestall shares the sketchbooks that shaped his career

2 years ago
Duration 4:57
A new exhibit of about 100 artistic journals reveals the evolution of Tom Forrestall's ideas and insight into his lengthy career.

While Colville was a major influence on Forrestall, Cronin said Forrestall approached painting differently.

"Tom was more observational in the sense of painting what he saw[and]Colvillemaybe invented more of his scenes," he said. "But Colville was always the model, he was the person that Tom compared himself to every day.

"He was very humble, he never thought he got anywhere close. But I think history will show he was a peer of Colville, not just a student."

Forrestall's paintings have gone from $25,000 to $75,000 at auctions, Cronin said.

He was a prolific painter too. Cronin saidForrestall was watercolour painting "right up until a few days ago."

'Very generous with his time and his art'

Cronin said Forrestall was probably the most beloved artist in Atlantic Canada and Nova Scotia.

"He was a pillar of the arts community, he was somebody who was very generous with his time and his art," he said.

The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia posted a tribute to Forrestall on Friday afternoon.

In a post to its Facebook page, the gallery said it was "deeply saddened" by the artist's death.

"As a prominent pillar of Atlantic realism, Tom had an uncanny ability to draw viewers into his compositions and lead us to see the extraordinary beauty that is part and parcel of the minutia of everyday objects and life," the post read in part.

The gallery noted it holds more than 100 of Forrestall's works in its permanent collection.

With files from Amy Smith and Mainstreet Halifax