Jack Shadbolt: Revelations

Jack Shadbolt: Revelations

258 East 1st Avenue 2nd FloorVancouver, BC V5T 1A6, Canada Saturday, May 13, 2023–Saturday, June 3, 2023 Opening Reception: Saturday, May 13, 2023, 1 p.m.–5 p.m.


untitled by jack leonard shadbolt

Jack Leonard Shadbolt

Untitled, 1962

11,000–15,000 CAD

sketch for the great ones by jack leonard shadbolt

Jack Leonard Shadbolt

Sketch for the Great Ones, 1948

23,000–26,000 CAD

killer birds by jack leonard shadbolt

Jack Leonard Shadbolt

Killer Birds, 1948

18,500–22,000 CAD

dogs of war by jack leonard shadbolt

Jack Leonard Shadbolt

Dogs of War, 1947

18,500–22,000 CAD

white tree victoria, bc by jack leonard shadbolt

Jack Leonard Shadbolt

White Tree Victoria, BC, 1939

9,500–14,000 CAD

Paul Kyle Gallery is pleased to present ‘Jack Shadbolt: Revelations’. Jack Shadbolt (1909 – 1998), one of Western Canada’s most significant non-Indigenous modern painters, second only to Emily Carr, is known for revolutionizing the Canadian art world by combining West Coast Indigenous Arts with his expressive style that realized in a devotion to humanistic ideals. Reflecting Shadbolt’s conscience and raw experience, this exhibition presents a number of monumental and important works that had never been publicly offered, ranging from his powerful and bleak early post war works, to dark and expressive large forest drawings, to his deeply spiritual and robust Indigenous art inspired paintings, to his late career dynamic semi-abstract canvases.  Young Jack Shadbolt met Emily Carr in 1930, who became his longstanding inspiration and heavily influenced Shadbolt’s works of Indigenous masks and landscapes. From the late 1930s to 1947, Shadbolt’s visual imagery shifted to social realism when he served as an unofficial war artist and worked overseas in World War II. Shadbolt presented a genuine portrayal of the haunting effect of war that is intensified by primitive and symbolic elements of emaciated figures, bombed ruins, and isolated landscapes devoid of human presence. In 1948, Shadbolt left Vancouver to further his studies in the bustling New York City, which ignited his artistic vision, enhanced his awareness as an artist, and deepened his understanding in the disturbances of modern society. He was influenced by Surrealism, Cubism, Primitivism, and Picasso’s Expressionism which guided his process to Automatism from the 1960s to 1990s. Shadbolt became fascinated with rebirth and regeneration, painting butterflies and ruined terrains that masks rituals and fetish elements. In Shadbolt’s late years he expressed: “I have tried all my life to reconcile nature with abstraction and deliberation with intuition.” (1990)