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Av Isaacs about the time he opened the Isaacs Gallery in 1970. |
The term "art dealer" has been replaced with the
more gentrified "gallerist" as if to suggest the earlier term had
connotations of car dealer or drug dealer. A man who made the term "art dealer" a proud and
creative one passed away on January 15, 2016. Avrom Isaacs or Av, as I used to call him, was a leader in
the Canadian art scene and in many ways one of my mentors. I knew him while I lived in Toronto and
first wandered into his Yonge Street gallery while finishing my Master of Arts
degree in philosophy in 1980.
Isaacs didn't study art history either it turns out. He had a degree in
economics and political science, also from the U of T. I had come from Montreal but he was
originally from Winnipeg. We were both autodidacts and cultural omnivores: big fans not just of visual art but
also of a broad range of culture– everything from poetry and theatre to
experimental music. When we wanted
to learn about something we waded into the field and learned first hand. Av delighted in my childhood stories of
how I would wake up in the morning and discover my father's trophies from poker
playing, such as Venetian glass or Inuit stone and bone carvings.
Reflecting its owner's taste, the stable of artists at the
Isaacs Gallery was very wide. One
minute I would be looking at a historical painting and the next it would be a
fresh canvas or sculpture from Michael Snow or Gordon Rayner. In between, it might be a mask from New
Guinea. When Av learned that I had
a keen interest in Inuit art, he gave me a special treat. He took me to what was in essence his
personal warehouse. More
diplomatic individuals called it his loft storehouse. Here was the treasure trove–shelves upon shelves of
art! I got to handle the work of
Karoo Ashevak and Jessie Oonark.
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Av retired in 2001; he died in 2016 aged 89. |
I wonder if the term "stable" will be replaced
with portfolio in reference to the collection of artists that a gallery
represents. Artist John Greer teased Av once about the term "stable"
asking if it suggested livestock or stability. After an initial frown, Greer says that Av blossomed into a
smile. I will miss those
blossoming smiles.
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