History, Art and Architecture Collection
O-8005
painting
Early Spring on the South Saskatchewan

O-8005
painting
Early Spring on the South Saskatchewan

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painting Photo gallery for Early Spring on the South Saskatchewan photo 1

Specifications

Artists Dorothy Elsie Knowles (Artist)
Date 1978
Signature D. KNOWLES 78
Inscriptions
IN MEMORY OF // OLIVE E. DIEFENBAKER, B.A., L.L.D., D.C.L. // PRESENTED BY THE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE PARLIAMENTARY WIVES // "EARLY SPRING ON THE SOUTH SASKATCHEWAN".
Materials paint, oil
Support canvas • wood, unidentified
Personal Names Olive Diefenbaker
Dimensions (cm) 77.3 (Width)59.3 (Height)4.6 (Thickness)
Functions Art
Barcode 600977
Photo gallery for Early Spring on the South Saskatchewan photo 2

Early Spring on the South Saskatchewan

This painting by Saskatchewan landscape artist Dorothy Knowles depicts the South Saskatchewan River. It was given to Parliament in 1978 by the spouses of Progressive Conservative Members. It may have been displayed in a Centre Block lounge used by the Parliamentary Wives Association (now known as the Parliamentary Spouses Association).

The painting was offered in memory of John Diefenbaker’s second wife, Olive. The two were married in 1953, the year he was elected as Member of Parliament for Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. Olive was closely associated with her husband’s political career in Ottawa. Fully bilingual, she was known as a gifted conversationalist and gracious host at 24 Sussex Drive during Diefenbaker’s time as Prime Minister. Olive died in 1976, while Diefenbaker was still a sitting MP; he died three years later. The two are buried together on the grounds of the Diefenbaker Centre in Saskatoon, in a plot overlooking the South Saskatchewan River.

Dorothy Elsie Knowles

Dorothy Knowles was born in Unity, Saskatchewan, in 1927. She studied biology and earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Saskatchewan before attending the Goldsmith School of Art in London in 1951. Knowles participated in many of the Emma Lake Artists’ Workshops, a summer program for professional artists led by various eminent figures of the post-war American modernist movement. Surrounded by abstractionists, she dedicated herself to landscape painting. Her traditional compositions and loose brushwork reflect the influence of Cézanne and Knowles’s strong connection with Western Canada. Knowles was made a member of the Order of Canada in 2004.