Mostrar 37913 resultados

Archival description
Com objeto digital
Previsualizar a impressão Ver:

Art McKay - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Art McKay, director, School of Art, Regina Campus.

Bio/Historical Note: Arthur Fortescue McKay, best known as Art McKay, was born in 1918 in Nipawin, Saskatchewan. His father was Joseph Fortescue McKay, a son of Angus McKay whose own grandfather was the younger John Richards McKay and whose grandmother was Harriet Ballenden. This and other ancestry would qualify McKay as an Anglo-Métis artist in Saskatchewan and in Canada. His mother, Georgina Agnes Newnham, was a daughter of another historical figure in Saskatchewan, the Anglican Bishop of Saskatchewan, Jervois Newnham. From an early age McKay drew landscape. His training in art began at the Provincial Institute of Technology and Art (now the Alberta University of the Arts) in Calgary (1946–1948), and later at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris (1949–1950), Columbia University in New York (1956–1957), and The Barnes Foundation in Merion, Pennsylvania (1956–1957). In 1952 McKay joined the staff of the Regina Art School (now the University of Regina). From 1951-1956 he was a lecturer in art at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. While there, McKay helped organize a series of Emma Lake Artists' Workshops in rural Saskatchewan. He became an associate professor in art there between 1956-1974, and director from 1964-1967. In 1978 he was an associate professor of art at the University of Regina. McKay received national and international attention as one of the painting group the Regina Five. The group's paintings were exhibited at the National Gallery of Canada in 1961 in a show titled "Five Painters from Regina". He was influenced in the 1960s by Barnett Newman, whom he, Ron Bloore, and Roy Kiyooka invited to the Emma Lake Artists' Workshop as guest artist in 1959. McKay's best known works are his scraped enamel circular and rectangular "mandalas", in which he uses relaxing, contemplative imagery to depict ideas related to Zen Buddhism. McKay was included in Clement Greenberg's 1964 "Post-Painterly Abstraction" exhibition. In the 1970s he continued to paint abstractions but also reintroduced the landscape in his work. In 1997, the MacKenzie Art Gallery mounted a national travelling exhibition, "Arthur F. McKay: A Critical Retrospective". His work is in many collections, both public and private, such as the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa. McKay died in 2000 in Squamish, British Columbia.

G.A. McMurray - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of G.A. McMurray, Head, Department of Psychology, University Hospital, 1950-1970.

Bio/Historical Note: Gordon McMurray (1913-2003) was born in Lennoxville, Quebec. He initially studied at Bishop's University from which he obtained a BSc in 1933 followed by an MSc in 1935. He then taught for several years in Quebec before enlisting in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War II. After the war he returned to academic studies and obtained a PhD from McGill University in 1949. He then joined the faculty at the University of Saskatchewan where he remained until his retirement. He was Head of the Department of Psychology from 1950-1970. McMurray was active in the Canadian Psychological Association being elected president in 1963 and elected a Fellow five years later. He died in Quebec in 2003.

Joanne McTaggart - Portrait

Indoor studio image of Joanne McTaggart, third-year Physical Education student and Huskie track and field sprinter, dressed in track uniform.

Bio/Historical Note: Joanne McTaggart, indisputably one of Canada’s premier runners of the 1970s, was born in Regina in 1954. She moved to Saskatoon for Grade XI and graduated from Walter Murray Collegiate, where she once won five events at the school meet. McTaggart also started to compete on behalf of the Saskatoon Track and Field Club. She was named to Canada’s national track team in 1972 while in Grade XI. She qualified for the relay team at the 1972 Munich Olympics but Canada didn't send a team. McTaggart enrolled at University of Saskatchewan (B.Ed. 1977) in 1974. In her rookie year with the Huskies, she won conference championships in the 40 yards and 300 metres. That same year she was Western Canadian Junior Champion in the 50 and 200 metres and the Canadian senior indoor 200 champion. McTaggart won 10 conference titles in her four years with the Huskies, highlighted by a world record performance of 38.2 seconds in the 300 metres at the 1975 indoor CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta. McTaggart qualified for the Canadian team at the 1975 Pan-American Games, won a bronze medal in the 4x100-metre relay and half an hour later, was invited to run the 4x400-metre relay where Canada held off the Americans and the Cubans to win the gold medal. At the 1976 Montreal Olympics, Joanne competed in the 200 metres and finished fourth in the 4X100-metre relay. McTaggart was inducted into the University of Saskatchewan Athletic Wall of Fame in 1984; the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in 1994, and the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame and Museum in 1996.

Immuno-Virology Research Unit - Official Opening

Lorne Hepworth, Saskatchewan Minister of Advanced Education and Manpower, cuts the ribbon marking the official opening of the new Immuno-Virology Research Unit. Assisting are (l to r): Dr. Ian M. McDonald, Dean of Medicine; Cliff Wright, Mayor of Saskatoon; George McLeod, Saskatchewan Minister of Health; and Dr. Leo F. Kristjanson, University President.

Saskatchewan Cancer and Medical Research Institute - Exterior

Looking northwest at the Saskatchewan Cancer and Medical Research Institute; road and trees in foreground.

Bio/Historical Note: The Saskatchewan Cancer and Medical Research Institute was officially opened on 10 May 1958 by Premier T.C. Douglas. Clad in locally quarried greystone with limestone panels, it was the.last of the buildings that constituted the University’s Medical Complex’s initial phase. Designed by Izumi, Arnott and Sugiyama and completed at a cost of $783,000, the building’s purpose was to provide shared accommodation for both general medical research and cancer specific investigations. Funding came from the federal and provincial governments and the provincial and national branches of the Canadian Cancer Society. A planned third floor was added in 1966. The building was "deconstructed" in 2009, with much of the building's material recycled including the greystone cladding for use with the E Wing that opened in 2013.

Frederick S. Mendel - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Fred Mendel, Saskatoon industrialist, art collector, and University benefactor, at the time of presentation of an honourary Doctor of Laws degree by the University of Saskatchewan.

Bio/Historical Note: Frederick S. Mendel, a Saskatchewan-based meat packer who actively built markets for Saskatchewan’s livestock as meat products, was born on 18 December 1888 in Recklinghausen, in the Ruhr Valley of Germany. He expanded his father’s meat-wholesaling business into a meat-packing empire with branches in Poland, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Rumania, and Bulgaria. Mendel and his family were forced to leave Germany when the Nazis began their persecution of Jews in the 1930s. He came to Saskatoon and acquired a building in 1940, where he launched Intercontinental Packers; he also built a packing enterprise in Australia, hence the name ‘Intercontinental’. Initially Mendel’s company specialized in canned hams for the United States market (called him “The Ham Man”), but a trade embargo ended that business, and for the next five years the firm focused on providing bacon for Britain - one of Canada’s contributions to the war effort. Saskatchewan farmers entered the hog business, and the Mendel plant prepared hogs for transport to Britain. After the war Mendel built plants in Regina, Red Deer, and Vancouver to compete for the Canadian market. He was a major contributor to his community and province, providing assistance for University of Saskatchewan Extension projects for Saskatchewan farmers and prizes for their livestock exhibits at fairs and exhibitions. Mendel was an avid collector of art and made a major financial contribution for the creation of the gallery that bore his name, the Mendel Art Gallery of Saskatoon. In 1965, in recognition of his contributions to the province, Mendel received an honourary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Saskatchewan. In 1971 he received the Canadian Industrial Development Award, given to the citizen who made the most significant contribution to Canada’s industrial development; he was the only Saskatchewan resident and the only meat packer to receive the award. In 1974 he was installed into the Order of Canada. Mendel died in 1976 at the age of 87, still active in his last year as chairman of the board of Intercontinental Packers. At the time of his death in 1976, Intercontinental Packers was one of Canada’s “big five” meat packers. In 1990 Fred Mendel was posthumously inducted into the Saskatchewan Agricultural Hall of Fame. He is buried in Cathedral City, California.

William R. Motherwell - Portrait

Image of William R. Motherwell, seated at his desk.

Bio/Historical Note: William Richard Motherwell was born in 1880 in Perth, Canada West, He attended the Ontario Agricultural College, graduating in 1881; then worked that summer in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba. The following year he spring he returned to the prairies joining settlers in who traveled by rail to Brandon, Manitoba, then by red river cart and wagon beyond to the area of Abernethy, Saskatchewan, where he settled and constructed the Motherwell Homestead. In 1901 he co-founded and became president of the Territorial Grain Growers' Association. Motherwell served in the provincial legislator from 1905-1918, and as Saskatchewan Minister of Agriculture from 1906-1917. His resignation from the provincial legislature was in protest over the provincial Liberal Party's support for conscription and reduction in French language rights. He first ran as the Liberal candidate for the House of Commons for the Saskatchewan riding of Assiniboia in a 1919 by-election. Although defeated, Motherwell was elected in the riding of Regina in the 1921 federal election. He was re-elected in 1925, 1926, 1930, and 1935 for the riding of Melville. From 1921 to 1930, Motherwell was the Minister of Agriculture, except for a short period in 1926. Motherwell died in Regina in 1943, and is buried at the Abernethy Community Cemetery, near his homestead.

Dr. Eric B. Moysey - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Dr. Eric B. Moysey, professor, Department of Agricultural Engineering, and Fellow, Canadian Society of Agricultural Engineering.

Bio/Historical Note: Born 12 July 1925 in Eston, Saskatchewan, Eric Bangor Moysey was raised on the family farm and received his early education in one-room schools. University studies took him to Saskatoon, graduating from engineering at the University of Saskatchewan in 1948. Dr. Moysey then pursued graduate studies at Iowa State in Ames. In 1950 he accepted a teaching position in the College of Engineering at the U of S. Dr. Moysey will be remembered professionally not only for his teaching but for his research, particularly in the areas of farm building standards, porous windbreaks and bulk storage of oilseed crops. In 2005 he moved to Winnipeg to be closer to family. Dr. Moysey died 12 March 2016.

Resultados 76 a 90 de 37913