John Mattar
(b. 1935 d. 2006)
John Mattar was born in Haifa, Palestine in 1935 where his father, Solomon, was the manager of Barclay’s Bank. In 1948, political unrest forced the Mattar family, now with seven children, to leave suddenly on foot, escaping to Jerusalem. John Mattar, was in his teens and it would be a fortuitous event in Mattar’s life. The family was given refuge in a monastery in Bethany for a short time and that is where the nuns taught him to paint icons. He would later illustrate a book on Middle Eastern Church icons.
John Mattar moved to Canada, in 1957. He would graduate from the Ontario College of Art with honours and acknowledged with awards. It is there he won a medal for Proficiency in Drawing and Painting as well as a travel scholarship.
In 1967, he was invited to exhibit in the Sir John A. Macdonald Centennial Show at the Art Gallery of Ontario. This show later toured major Canadian cities and was displayed at Habitat in Montreal. John won two purchase awards from the Alberta College of Arts and many other prizes. He served on the jury of both national and international print shows, achieved membership in the Ontario Society of Artists and was also a member of the Watercolour and Print Societies.
His work was exhibited in Toronto at the Sisler Gallery, at Erindale College of the University of Toronto, in Calgary, Seattle and locally at The Painting on The Green, in Elora, and in Georgetown at the Gallery House Sol. He won acclaim for engravings, and watercolours as well as other media.
Mattar would share his passion for art by pursuing an extensive teaching career. He was a technical assistant in the Print Department of the Ontario College of Art, where he also taught drawing and painting. He instructed at Guelph Collegiate Vocational institute, Conestoga Collage, South Hampton School of Art and at many workshops. He was selected by the Brantford Art League to prepare a limited edition print for exclusive sale at Glenhyrst Art Gallery.
During the 1970s, Mattar had a television show called Try It where the main topic was portrait painting. He was most prolific drawing portraits. He constantly sketched people whenever he was sitting and waiting.
Mattar was sometimes described as a hyper-realistic painter and his work was highly detailed. He drew the wildflowers in the fields, horses at fall fairs, crumbling barns and stone walls – much of which was inspired by the sites from Wellington County, most commonly Elora and the home of his studio – Eden Mills.
https://www.wellingtonadvertiser.com/art-exhibition-and-sale-celebrates-life-and-work-of-john-mattar/
Title: Figure in Space
Date: 1967
Medium: aquatint etching
Edition: 49/50
Accession no: 968.11
Gallery purchase (Glenhyrst Art Committee Commissioned Series)