Dear Nan

Letters of Emily Carr, Nan Cheney, and Humphrey Toms

Edited by Doreen Walker
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Auto/biography & Memoir, Art & Performance Studies, Art, Art History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774803489, 505 pages, January 1990
Paperback : 9780774803908, 505 pages, January 1990
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774842983, 505 pages, November 2011
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774854917, 505 pages, October 2007

Table of contents

Foreword

Introduction

Note on the Text

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

Colour Plates

Chronology

Illustration

The Letters

Postscript

Transcriptions of the Carr Letters

Emily Carr's “Variations”

Index

Description

This collection includes 150 letters Emily Carr wrote to her friends Nan Cheney and Humphrey Toms, and 100 other letters relating mainly to Emily Carr. The letters date from 1930 to 1945, the most prolific period in Carr’s career as both painter and writer. In them she writes in colourful detail about her everyday activities, and discusses her painting – “the biggest thing in my life.” There are outbursts of exasperation and anger as well as many indications of her caring, her warmth, her wisdom and her wit, and of her impatience with critics and poseurs, and they give insights into her various relationships with, among others, Lawren Harris, Ira Dilworth, Jack Shadbolt, Garnett Sedgewick, Dorothy Livesay, A.Y. Jackson, and Arthur Lismer.

Reviews

The collection is an important one; it gives us a taste of earthy, domestic Emily Carr, a sense of her everyday speech and her wonderful bad attitude to grammar and spelling which Walker had the good sense to leave.

- Susan Crean