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==Later Life==
==Later Life==

From 1960 until her death, most of Alma Duncan's time was devoted to her painting and drawing, much of it done on location near her home outside of [[Cumberland, Ontario]]<ref name="delake" />. However, she maintained her interests in both industrial subjects (which began during her [[World War Two]] project and resulted in a traveling retrospective of her industrial drawings in 1987, mounted by the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in [[Oshawa, Ontario]]) and the [[Northern Canada|Canadian North]] (spending two months in 1975 on a sketching trip to [[Baffin Island|Baffin]] and [[Ellesmere Island|Ellesmere]] Islands)<ref name="archives" />.

She died on December 15th, 2004, after a long illness.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 00:50, 24 February 2008

Alma Duncan
File:Almaduncan-selfportrait-1940.jpg
Alma Duncan - Self Portrait with Braids (1940)
NationalityCanadian

Alma Mary Duncan (October 1917[1] - December 15 2004[2]) was a Canadian painter, graphic artist, and filmmaker.

Early Life

Alma Duncan was born in the southwestern Ontario town of Paris, but attended high school in Hamilton, Ontario and Montreal, Quebec[1]. Though largely self-taught as an artist, she studied with Canadian painter Adam Sheriff Scott as a teenager and later took studio drawing courses at the Roberts-Neumann School of Art[3].

War Work

In 1943, Duncan obtained permission to document the lives of war workers and the members of the Canadian Women's Army Corps with her sketches.[1] Several of these pieces are now held by the Canadian War Museum in its Beaverbrook Collection of War Art. [4] [5] [6]

National Film Board

In 1943, the National Film Board of Canada invited Duncan to join its Graphics Division. She worked first with the Information Display department[1], designing posters, publications, and travelling displays for National Film Board projects. She moved to the NFB's Animation Department when the Graphics Division was disbanded and produced her first film, Folksong Fantasy (shown at the 1951 Edinburgh International Film Festival)[3] while under contract with the NFB as an independent producer[1].

Dunclaren Productions

In 1951, Alma Dunan and her longtime partner, photographer Audrey McLaren, formed the film company Dunclaren Productions. Their first film, Kumak the Sleepy Hunter (1953) was a retelling of an Inuit legend using puppets and a stop-motion animation technique[1]. It was nominated for a BAFTA award in 1954 as a documentary film[7]. They produced two other films, Hearts and Soles (1955), which used the same animation techniques as Kumak, and Friendly Interchange (1959), which was made with chalk drawings. Though the production company never disbanded, it became inactive after 1960[1].

Canada Post

File:Stamp-autumn.gif
'Autumn' stamp from Alma Duncan's 1971 "The Maple in four Seasons" series

In 1970, Canada Post commissioned Alma Duncan to design stamps. She produced the series "The Maple in four Seasons" (released in 1971) and the series "Floral Aerogrammes" (released in 1973). Her "Autumn" stamp from the "Maple in four Seasons" series was selected as the stamp of the month by the Scott Monthly Journal[3], a periodical that commented on stamps worldwide.











Later Life

From 1960 until her death, most of Alma Duncan's time was devoted to her painting and drawing, much of it done on location near her home outside of Cumberland, Ontario[2]. However, she maintained her interests in both industrial subjects (which began during her World War Two project and resulted in a traveling retrospective of her industrial drawings in 1987, mounted by the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa, Ontario) and the Canadian North (spending two months in 1975 on a sketching trip to Baffin and Ellesmere Islands)[1].

She died on December 15th, 2004, after a long illness.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Alma Duncan and Audrey Mclaren fonds [multiple media]". Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  2. ^ a b "Alma Duncan" (HTML). D & E Lake, Ltd. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  3. ^ a b c Macdonald, Colin (1997). A Dictionary of Canadian Artists (5th ed.). Ottawa, Canada: Canadian Paperbacks Publishing Ltd. pp. pp. 662a-664a. ISBN 0-919554-21-0. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  4. ^ "Résultats de la recherche/Search Results". Rivetting ships' boilers. Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  5. ^ "Résultats de la recherche/Search Results". Interior of boiler shop (ship building). Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  6. ^ "Résultats de la recherche/Search Results". Shaping hot metal under hammer (ship building). Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  7. ^ "IMDb: BAFTA Awards: 1954". Retrieved 2008-02-23.