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XXXXXBorn
in Saskatchewan, Ben Woolfitt has lived in Toronto since
1965 when he came to study at the Founders College at York
University. In 1967 he made a trip to New York City and was
there turned on by Color Field painting, especially the works
of Rothko, Louis, Noland and Olitski. Already in 1969 he
began painting some fine Color Field pictures of himself,
culminating 6 years later in a beautiful series of large
pictures based on a diamond form. They show a consummate
technique and a love of mystery and the sublime, as the critic
Ken Carpenter has already pointed out (Carpenter has been
Woolfitt’s chief supporter).
..........After the mid 70’s Woolfitt turned to smaller,
more intimate work often on paper. A series of personal tragedies beset
him. Also he needed to be more active in dealing with his finances. He
founded and taught at an art school and then, in 1978, established what
became a very successful retail business, Woolfitt’s Art Supplies.
Today it is an international company about to open a factory in China.
Ben has become one of Toronto’s most successful businessmen.
..........This has permitted him to turn back to his first love,
Modernist Painting. He loves the luscious sensuality of the new acrylic
gel, which has been developed since the late 80’s. More explicitly
he loved the gels potential for deep color glazes (deeper than is possible
with oils) and ravishingly glossy surfaces. Undoubtedly Woolfitt has
been inspired by the work of fellow, Torontonian, Joseph Drapell and
the New New painters. His recent “Water Series” and “Ocean
Series” show a brilliant technical mastery of the new medium and
an ambition to make monumental lyrical statements with it. At their finest
his pictures seem like amazingly gorgeous, natural events, which, at
the same time, proclaim a human act and affirmation.
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