(
)

PAST EXHIBITION

Anne Kahane

Anne Kahane was born in Austria in 1924 and moved to Canada at the age of two. She studied at Cooper Union Art School in New York and the École des Beaux-Arts in Montréal, and has had a distinguished teaching career at both Concordia University and McMaster University in the early 1980s: Kahane lived in Hamilton during this time, returning to Montréal in 1987.

Kahane was notable as one of a few active women sculptors in Canada in the late 1940s and 1950s. By the mid-1950s, she began working in wood—not a material favoured by modernist sculptors of the period, yet producing ambitious, dramatic and vigorous works in a figurative language, and received numerous public commissions. Carving and material were part of the process as she noted in a 1967 interview:

“I must adapt it to work in wood. Wood suits me: I like the challenge of its restrictions [and] I often consider myself as a sort of carpenter who makes sculpture, whose pieces fit together like well-made tables and chairs.”

“Unpolished wood has a quality of breathing and scintillating, of catching every flicker, like a drawing, [and] I wanted to make sculpture with this kind of intimacy.”

The works for the exhibition—from the Museum’s collection—include Kahane’s sculpture, prints and drawing, and as a complement, graphic works by European sculptors such as Henry Moore and Ossip Zadkine, who influenced Kahane during her formative training. Also included will be a dual portrait wood engraving by Kahane’s artist husband Robert Langstadt (1912-1987), on loan from The Robert McLaughlin Gallery collection.

Anne Kahane has exhibited nationally—including two solo exhibitions at McMaster, in 1961 and 1981 — and internationally. Her works are represented in public collections across Canada.

List of Works in Exhibition:

ANNE KAHANE (Canadian b. 1924)

Flying Angel, 1960, Ed. 4/30, woodcut, 60.3 x 45.5 cm, Purchase, 1962
Women, 1958, Ed. 7/15, etching, 24.6 x 19.8 cm, Wentworth House Art Committee Purchase, 1962
Bather, 1962, wood, 111.6 x 21.9 cm, Wentworth House Art Committee Purchase, 1962
Blue Figure, 1976, plywood, acrylic on pine base, 209 x 36.5 x 8 cm, Gift of Nettie Levine, 1989
Tango 2, 1976, pine, 168.5 x 49 x 68.3 cm, George Loranger Bequest, 1994
Untitled, 1984 colour woodcut, 60.5 x 48.3 cm, George Loranger Bequest, 1994
Untitled, n.d., colour woodcut, 67.5 x 53.5 cm, George Loranger Bequest, 1994
Untitled, n.d., ink, 19 x 35.7 cm, George Loranger Bequest, 1994

ROBERT LANGSTADT (Canadian b. Germany 1912-1987)

Self-portrait with Anne Kahane, c. 1962, woodcut, ed. 10/15, 66.2 x 68.9 cm, Gift of Georges Loranger, 1985, Courtesy of The Robert McLaughlin Gallery

MARINO MARINI (Italian 1901-1980)

Man on Horse, n.d., Ed. 41/75, etching , 76 x 56.5 cm, George Loranger Bequest, 1994
Man on Horse, n.d. Ed. 44/60, lithograph, 62.5 x 90 cm, George Loranger Bequest, 1994

HENRY MOORE (English 1898-1986)

Seated Figure, c. 1973-1974, pencil, charcoal, pen, ink , 25.4 x 17.8 cm, Gift of Gordon Eberts, 1991

HILDA IDA MARY WOOLNOUGH (Canadian 1934-2007)

The Splinter, 1963, Ed. 1/10 ochre and blue, woodcut, 29.9 x 23.9 cm, Wentworth House Art Committee Purchase, 1965

OSSIP ZADKINE (Russian, 1890-1967)

Praying Mantis, 1964 , Ed. 78/200, coloured lithograph, 57.2 x 42 cm, Gift of Rabbi and Mrs. Bernard Baskin, 1988
Les Rois Magis / The Magi, 1953, lithograph, edition 8/250 , 56.5 x 38 cm, Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Alexander Gordon McKay, 2010
Trio, n.d. , Ed. 50/220, lithograph, 65.8 x 50.6 cm, Gift of Miriam Shiell, 2009

Curated by: McMaster Museum of Art

June 09, 2011 – August 13, 2011

VIEW ARCHIVE
Link to Exhibitions Archive for a complete list of past exhibitions

PAST EXHIBITIONS

A blurred person walks in front of a wall featuring the photographic series Grace (2006). The artworks on display are photos of figures with hands covering their faces. Installation view of I'm Not Your Kinda Princess at Plug In ICA.

Lori Blondeau: I’m Not Your Kinda Princess

Read More
A photo of The Clichettes dressed as muscular men with wild hair, they are jumping mid-air holding colourful guitars.

The Clichettes: Lips, Wigs, and Politics

Read More
Faded title

SUMMA 2024: Yearbook

Read More
Detail of Rajni Perera, Storm, 2020.

Rajni Perera: Futures

Read More
A collaged and layered photograph of the Grand River floats in the centre of a black background, along with the words: Arenhátyen tsi ní:tsi teyottenyonhátye’ kwató:ken tsi nī:tsi yonkwa’nikonhrayén:ta’s Image courtesy of Courtney Skye. The list of artists is displayed along the bottom: Dakota Brant, Denny Doolittle, Elizabeth Doxtater, Kaya Hill, Rick Hill, Arnold Jacobs, Ken Maracle, Shelley Niro, Protect The Tract Artist Collective, Steve Smith, Greg Staats, Kristen E. Summers, Jeff Thomas

We Remain Certain
Arenhátyen tsi ní:tsi teyottenyonhátye’ kwató:ken tsi nī:tsi yonkwa’nikonhrayén:ta’s

Read More
Two artworks suspended in a grey background; Nicholas Baier's Octobre, and Shelley Niro's Nature's Wild Children.

Chasm

Read More
Artist Mike MacDonald in Gage Park, photo captured by Dianne Bos.

Lisa Myers: Finding what Grows

Read More
The SUMMA 2023 logo is an overlapping triple diamond design, featuring shapes coloured in gradient from red to yellow, purple to pink, and green to blue. The logo is suspended in the centre of a background consisting of a pink and blue swirling gradient.

SUMMA 2023 – Where We Intersect: Identities, Environments, Activisms

Read More

SUBMISSIONS & ASSISTANCE

SUBMISSIONS:

The McMaster Museum of Art is presently not accepting artists’ submissions for exhibitions at this time of leadership change at the museum.  Our Interim Director will be undertaking a review of the museum’s forward exhibition schedule, as well as our policies and procedures, in the coming months.  Our present focus is the ongoing maintenance of our permanent collection and storage needs for future collection activities.

The museum remains committed to our collecting priority in the continued support of early career, mid-career and established Indigenous artists, artists of the Black diaspora and racialized artists through purchases and commissions. Donations will be welcomed and reviewed at a future date which will be posted on our website.

ASSISTANCE:

The McMaster Museum of Art is a third party recommender for Ontario Arts Council (OAC) Exhibition Assistance Grants.

The museum is currently accepting applications. Our next program deadline is: December 16, 2024.

Priorities:
Artists who demonstrate an interest and consideration of art as a medium for social change and action.

Please follow the guidelines established by the Ontario Arts Council, apply directly through their website, and submit the following with your applications:

Brief artist statement
Confirmation letter from the gallery/museum/venue
Budget
CV
Digital images of work