Yukon painting by A.Y. Jackson going up for auction - Action News
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Yukon painting by A.Y. Jackson going up for auction

"I hope you received the canvas of the 'Indian Village of Moosehide.' A lot of people down here have wanted to buy it so I trust you like it," Jackson wrote to a nurse in Mayo, in 1965.

Canvas depicts the First Nations village of Moosehide, outside Dawson City

The oil painting 'Moosehide, Yukon' measuring about 41 centimetres by 51 centimetres was purchased by a nurse based in Mayo, Yukon, in 1965. Jackson had visited the area on a painting and sketching trip the year before. (Lunds Auctioneers and Appraisers Ltd. )

A Yukon-inspired canvas by one of Canada's most famous artists is expected to fetch up to $30,000 at an auction next month in B.C.

A.Y. Jackson's Moosehide, Yukonwill be sold by Victoria-based auctioneer Lunds on Feb. 27. According to the auction house's website, the oil painting measuring about 41 centimetres by 51 centimetres will likely go forsomething between $15,000 and $30,000.

Jackson, an original member of the famed Group of Seven, sold the painting in 1965 to a nurse who was based in Mayo, Yukon.

"I suspect that she paid somewhere between $100 and $500 for it," said Arthur Underhill of Lunds. "Nothing in terms of what today's market is."

The painting comes with a handwritten letter from Jackson, addressed to a Diane M. Thomson at the "Mayo General Hospital," and dated Mar. 15, 1965, in Ottawa.

"I hope you received the canvas of the 'Indian Villageof Moosehide.'Alot of people down here have wanted to buy it so I trust you like it. I am enclosing the invoice," the letter reads.

Jackson hadvisited Yukon a year earlier, making sketchesaround Dawson and Mayo. Moosehidewas aFirst Nations settlement a few kilometres down the Yukon River from the Dawson City.

"He might have whipped off an oil-on-board and then finished off a canvas in his studio, but this to me looks like he painted it on site right up there," Underhill said.

"He would have a little easel and a portable set-up, and he would have tipped it up and painted a picture."

Jackson painted a number of canvases inspired by his visits to Yukon. In 1943, he was commissioned by the National Gallery of Canada to depictthe construction of the Alaska Highway. He spent several weeks with the construction crews, making sketches and paintings of thehistoric project, and the Yukon landscape.

In 2016, the Yukon government added Jackson's Ogilvie Mountains to the territory's permanent art collection.

With files from Dave White