Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery

University of Victoria Legacy Art Galleries (Legacy) is the university’s art museum, responsible for the accessibility and stewardship of an art collection which consists of approximately 18,000 objects including Canadian, Indigenous and international historic and contemporary art. Legacy activates the collection for research, teaching and learning for students, faculty and the general public through exhibitions, campus displays, publications, web-projects, public programs, and events—on site and through digital resources.

UVic Legacy Art Galleries
Established1964 (Collection established 1953 but with no permanent museum facility)
LocationUniversity of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Coordinates48°25′36″N 123°21′58″W
Typeart galleries
DirectorMary Jo Hughes
Websitehttp://legacy.uvic.ca

Legacy has three main sites for rotating exhibitions including the Legacy Art Gallery Downtown at 630 Yates Street, on campus at the Legacy Maltwood in the Mearns Centre for Learning - McPherson Library, and in the First Peoples House. Additionally, more than 2000 works from the collection are on display in buildings across campus and in the community,[1] underlining the educational and community-building roles of art. The Legacy Downtown is also a site for public programs, and both university and community events.[2]

General History

The Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery is named in memory of husband and wife John and Katharine Maltwood (1878–1961), who were major benefactors to the University of Victoria. The Maltwoods' original donation ranged from Chinese ceramics to textiles, rugs, seventeenth century English furniture, Canadian painting, and Katharine Maltwood's own sculptural works, paintings, and drawings.[3] Acquired by the University of Victoria in 1964,[4] the collection moved to its current home in the University Centre in 1978, amalgamating with the original University of Victoria Art Collection founded in 1953.[5]

Since 1978, the Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery has expanded its collection through donations from various benefactors. Michael C. Williams donated the largest gift, which facilitated the collection’s growth to an excess of 30,000 works.[6] Currently, the Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery exhibits in three distinct gallery spaces: the Maltwood Art Gallery, located in the University Centre at the University of Victoria; the McPherson Gallery, located in the University of Victoria’s McPherson Library; and the Legacy Art Gallery and Café, now called the Legacy Art Gallery, located in downtown Victoria, British Columbia.[7]


Collections History

The Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery acquires most of the works in its collection through donations from a variety of benefactors. The two largest benefactors to the University of Victoria Art Collections are John & Katharine Maltwood and Michael C. Williams.

The Maltwood Collection

Katherine Maltwood, by Nico Jungman, 1905, Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery, Victoria, British Columbia

The Maltwood Collection is a subcategory of works owned by the University of Victoria Art Collections.[8] The original Maltwood collection was owned by John and Katharine Maltwood, global travellers who accumulated various items relating to their spiritual interests.[9] These pieces were displayed in their Victoria home, alongside Katharine’s own works. The collection adheres to the couple’s ideology of having nothing in their home that was not useful or beautiful.[10] Upon moving to Victoria, the Maltwoods decided to develop a museum to house their art, with the aim of one day donating it to the city. They purchased a former restaurant in the Royal Oak area of Victoria, British Columbia. Serving as a gallery and home, it was called The Thatch.[11] The couple’s collection consisted of household items from various artistic periods, such as English Gothic furniture, furniture from the Tudor and Stuart periods, Oriental and Persian antique rugs and Oriental silk hanging scrolls, paintings from Paris, London, and Peiping, modern oil and watercolour paintings, Chinese and Middle Eastern ceramics and figurines, and Moslem pottery and metalwork,[12] in addition to Katharine Maltwood’s own works, writings, and journals. A library of art books referencing the Maltwoods' holdings accompanied the collection.[13]

The Maltwood Collection was generously donated to the University of Victoria Art Collections in 1964. It resided at The Thatch until 1977 when it moved to its current location in the University Centre at the University of Victoria. The Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery currently conserves the art objects from the donation, while the University of Victoria’s Special Collections conserves the Maltwoods’ personal letters, journals, and books, including Katharine’s writing.[14]

The Michael C. Williams Collection

The Legacy Art Gallery and Cafe, Victoria, British Columbia

Upon his passing in 2000, Michael Collard Williams bequeathed most of his estate to the University of Victoria.[15] Valued at $17 million, the donation marks the University of Victoria’s largest gift to date. The Williams Collection is made up of over 1100 art objects such as drawings, paintings, and sculptures that include contemporary and historical West Coast art, Aboriginal art, and antique works.[16]

Michael C. Williams moved to British Columbia in 1950, eventually settling in Victoria in 1958. In 1977, his attention was drawn to the city’s heritage, resulting in many building restoration projects in the downtown area. His first urban renewal was the Maynard Court area on Johnson Street, followed by the 1890s era Grand Central Hotel and Victoria Box and Paper Complex,[17] for which he was given the North American Award of Merit from New York’s Downtown Research and Development Centre. The Swans Hotel and Brew Pub is perhaps one of his better-known restorations, a beautiful street-side hotel that once served as a seed and fertilizer warehouse.[18][19]

The University of Victoria received many of these properties through the Williams bequest. The Legacy Art Gallery and Café, located at 630 Yates St. in Victoria, was just one of these properties. The Legacy Gallery is a monument to Williams’s life and generosity, hosting rotating exhibits that draw from his collection and other University of Victoria Art Collections holdings. The Legacy Gallery also exhibits local and Canadian artists. The Swans Hotel and Brew Pub is another property owned by the University of Victoria. The "Art Hotel" was opened in 1987 as Williams’s own exhibition space. The hotel still displays many works from the Williams collection year round in its many suites and public areas.[20]

Exhibits

The Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery has exhibited a wide range of works in its three gallery locations: The Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery, The Legacy Café and Art Gallery, and The McPherson Library Gallery.[21]

  • Master Minds: UVic Retirees Exhibit, April 13, 2007 – June 7, 2007
  • Cascadia: Studio Furniture from Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and Alaska, June 15, 2007 – August 20, 2007
  • The Hold of Our Hands: Art from the Robin & Sylvia Skelton Collection, August 31, 2007 – November 15, 2007
  • Book Arts: Mosaic & Millennium in a Box, October 6, 2007 – January 10, 2008
  • Studio Portraits: Photo-collages of the Studios of 33 Artists of Southern Vancouver Island, November 22, 2007–March 31
  • Rebels and Realists: 100 Years of the Victoria Sketch Club, March 9–May 29, 2009
  • Gathering: 25th Anniversary Masters and Doctoral Art Education, June 4–September 25, 2009
  • Michael's World, July 2007–Feb 2008
  • Borderlands: Liminal Treatments of the Heart and Mind, February 6–April 27, 2008
  • Copper Thunderbird: Invention, Inspiration and Transformation, July 9–November 30, 2008
  • Conversations About Green, April 1, 2009 – May 3, 2009
  • Taking Flight: The Art of J. Fenwick Lansdowne, December 10, 2008 – May 3, 2009
  • Hope in Shadows, May 6, 2009 – May 30, 2009
  • MFA Visual Arts Exhibition, May 13, 2009 – August 16, 2009
  • From a Modern Time: The Architectural Photography of Hubert Norbury, Victoria in the 50s and 60s, July 1–August 23, 2009
  • Rocks and Shadows: Exploring the Works of Judith Foster, August 26–October 25, 2009
  • Ted Harrison: Painting Paradise, August 19–January 3, 2010
  • Inside Chinatown: Paintings by Robert Amos, October 28, 2009 – January 17, 2010
  • Graphic Radicals, August 12, 2010 – October 31, 2010
  • A Walk Through the City, March 4–29, 2009
  • Fiona Spalding-Smith: Conversations About Green, April 1–May 3, 2009
  • Hope in Shadows, May 6–31, 2009
  • From a Modern Time: Architectural Photographs of Hubert Norbury, July 1–August 23, 2009
  • Rocks and Shadows: Exploring the Works of Judith Foster, August 12–September 6, 2009
  • Inside Chinatown: Paintings by Robert Amos, October 8, 2009 – January 27, 2010
  • Revival: The Personal Archive of Robert Aller, February 23–March 28, 2010
  • Café Conversations: Pinhole Photography by Bob St. Cyr, June 11–July 11, 2010
  • British Sporting Art: Works from the S. W. Jackman Collection, April 14–June 6, 2010
  • Art Beyond Beauty, July 14–August 8, 2010
The Art of the Book '08 Exhibit, 2010-2011, Victoria, British Columbia
  • 20 Years of Fine Furniture, June 15, 2007 – August 20, 2007
  • The Mac: A Tribute to Dr. D. L. MacLaurin, August 25, 2007 – September 30, 2007
  • Art Education Faculty Exhibit, January 15, 2008 – February 14, 2008
  • Living with Land Mines, February 20, 2008 – March 28, 2008
  • Macbeth: A Civil War of the Mind, April 3, 2008 – May 31, 2008
  • This Earth, June 4, 2008 – July 27, 2008
  • The Lion and The Fox: Art and Literary Works by Wyndham Lewis from the C. J. Fox Collection, April 1–May 28, 2009
  • Two Fish, Out of Water: Photographs from the Japanese Landscape by Paul Kohl, August 5–October 5, 2009
  • Passage: Portraits by Lisa Hebden, November 18–December 17, 2009
  • The Art of the Book '08, October 16, 2010 – January 5, 2011

References

  1. "Art on campus - University of Victoria". UVic.ca. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  2. https://legacy.uvic.ca/about_us/index.html
  3. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 11, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  4. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 59, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  5. Sherman, Lila (1980), Art Museums of America: A Guide to Collections in the United States and Canada, Morrow Publishing, p. 371, ISBN 0-688-03570-1
  6. Legacy Art Gallery and Cafe Archived 2010-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  7. https://www.uvic.ca/legacygalleries/
  8. University Of Victoria Art Collections Donors Archived 2010-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 11, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  10. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 59, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  11. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 47, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  12. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 45, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  13. Brown, Rosemary Alicia (1981), Katharine Emma Maltwood, Victoria=Sono Nis Press, p. 59, ISBN 0-919462-96-0
  14. Maltwood Art Museum and Gallery: History of the Collection
  15. Segger, Martin (2007), Michael’s World: A Generation of Studio Artists in Old Town Victoria, Victoria=University of Victoria Press, p. I
  16. Segger, Martin (2007), Michael’s World: A Generation of Studio Artists in Old Town Victoria, Victoria=University of Victoria Press, p. I
  17. Segger, Martin (2007), Michael’s World: A Generation of Studio Artists in Old Town Victoria, Victoria=University of Victoria Press, p. 3
  18. Segger, Martin (2007), Michael’s World: A Generation of Studio Artists in Old Town Victoria, Victoria=University of Victoria Press, p. 4
  19. The Williams Legacy: About Michael C. Williams
  20. Segger, Martin (2007), Michael’s World: A Generation of Studio Artists in Old Town Victoria, Victoria=University of Victoria Press, p. 1
  21. University of Victoria Art Collections Past Exhibits
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