History, Art and Architecture Collection
O-1957
painting (mural)
The Printed Word

O-1957
painting (mural)
The Printed Word

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painting (mural) Photo gallery for The Printed Word photo 1

Specifications

Artists Arthur Watkins Crisp (Artist)
Date 1921
Signature CRISP
Inscriptions
THE PRINTED WORD
Materials paint, oil metal, gold leaf
Support canvas • plaster
Dimensions (cm) 290.0 (Width)270.0 (Height)
Functions Art
Photo gallery for The Printed Word photo 2

Murals

The old Reading Room - used since 1990 for committee meetings and receptions - received an elaborate classical treatment recalling the dignity and stateliness of the English Palladian style. Architect John A. Pearson paid a great deal of attention to the Reading Room's interior finishing, hiring the famous mural painter, Arthur Crisp, to produce seventeen canvases for the new room. This choice of decoration reflected the great interest in mural art in Canada after 1900. When the panels were installed, critics described them as fine specimens of mural art, typical of Crisp's bold and colourful style. Toronto Saturday Night published photographic reproductions of the paintings, and commented on their artistic qualities and sublime effect on the room's interior decoration. The most prominent murals are located on the south and north walls. Their appropriate themes, warm colours and imposing compositions play a key role in creating the atmosphere of the room. Two panels, centred on the south and north walls, celebrate the art of printing. Four other sizeable paintings, located at the corners of the south and north walls, portray the regional economic development of Canada in the 1920s.

The Printed Word

Across the room, above the north entrance of the Reading Room, is The Printed Word: a more literal companion panel expressing the purpose of a Reading Room devoted to newspapers. This painting celebrates the achievements of the Press. The panel features a printing press from the 1920s, with a group of sturdy pressmen examining a proof sheet. This represents the printing industry in Canada, and implies that the dissemination of information related to the affairs of the country is essential to a strong and free society.