Uplift

Visual Culture at the Banff School of Fine Arts

By PearlAnn Reichwein & Karen Wall
Categories: Environmental & Nature Studies, Environmental History, Art & Performance Studies, Art, History, Canadian History, Art History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774864510, 356 pages, November 2020
Paperback : 9780774864527, 356 pages, April 2021
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774864534, 356 pages, November 2020
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774864541, 356 pages, November 2020
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774864558, 352 pages, September 2020

Table of contents

Introduction: Artists, Tourists, and Citizens

1 Uplifting the People: Extension Education and the Arts

2 Branding Banff: Arts Education, Tourism, and Nation Building

3 Building a “Campus in the Clouds”: Space, Design, Modernity

4 “Wholesome, Understandable Pictures”: Practices of Landscape Painting and Production of Landscapes

5 Presence and Portrait: Indigeneity in the Park

6 “Leading Artists of the World”: Teachers as Tourist Attractions and Pedagogues

7 “Some Paint, Some Tan”: Students Coming to the Mountains

Conclusion: The Arts, Nature, and Democracy

Notes; Bibliography; Index

Description

In 1933, the Banff School opened in the stunning surroundings of Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies. From its beginnings offering a single drama course, it has since grown into the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, a renowned cultural destination. Uplift traces its first four decades as it generated ideals of culture and liberal democratic citizenship intrinsic to the development of modern Canada. In an era of unstable cultural policy and state support, Uplift draws welcome attention to the continued place of the arts, culture, and the humanities in public education and a life well lived.

Reviews

Uplift reflects Reichwein’s expertise in social and environmental history and Wall’s expertise in communication, public art, and memory. They build the Banff School for readers and illustrate how attitudes around nature and Canadian identity prevalent in the 1920s were formalized and regionalized in the 1950s.

- Dale Barbour

This is a thoughtful, at times entertaining book which provides a valuable lens through which to view no just the history of the Banff Centre but also the complex and vital relationships between culture, education, and the state.

- Ben Fullalove, Alberta University of the Arts

Uplift is an impressive work of scholarship and will be of great value for academics in various fields.

- Catherine Annau

Uplift is the first history of the Banff School of Fine Arts. The historical narrative presented therein is comprehensive and investigative ... Pearl Ann Reichwein and Karen Wall adroitly weave together a wealth of primary source information to show how the Banff School was embedded in a complex network of interactions between national park tourism, art, adult extension education, and cultural policy.

- Danielle Raad, Yale University Art Gallery