Everything about Christian Cardell Corbet totally explained
Christian Cardell Corbet (born
January 31,
1976) is a
Canadian painter,
sculptor and designer.
Early life
Born at
Pickering Beach,
Ontario, he was raised by his paternal grandparents A. J. Corbet II and Alice Charlotte Corbet (née Gould), descendants of a prominent family from
Guernsey and a theatrical family from
London. At a very young age, he developed a strong interest in the fine arts while working with his grandfather on commercial signs. Due to increasingly ill health, by the age of 14 he wasn't able to participate in regular sports like most children his age, so his grandparents strongly encouraged him to paint and sculpt. Being raised predominantly on the shores of
Lake Ontario he always held a close fascination with water, water formations and its power which to this very day has become a main theme for his paintings.
Studies
In 1991, the artist moved to
Guelph, Ontario and studied at the
University of Guelph. In 1994 he moved to
Vancouver,
British Columbia to open his first studio where he started selling his paintings. In the spring of 1995 his painting entitled "Elizabeth Holding Her Ribbon" a portrait of
the Queen Mother was acquired by the Queen Mother for her private collection. On March 7, 1997 Corbet founded Canada's first official portrait academy the "Canadian Portrait Academy" which was lauded by Governor General
Roméo LeBlanc.
Working primarily in a realist form, he's made a large body of work depicting "ice themes" namely icebergs, ice floes and pressure ice. These paintings have made him well-known, but it's his finely executed sculptures, in particular
art medallions, that he's well-known for. These rare art forms, generally less than ten inches in diameter and created in bronze, wax and mixed media, have brought the artist international acclaim.
From 1996 to 1997 he studied at
McMaster University at
Hamilton, Ontario in the anatomy laboratories in order to gain greater knowledge of the human form; an exercise which has taught him not only about the human body but also the spiritual aspect of the human as a being. During this time he was a private student of Canadian sculptor
Elizabeth Bradford Holbrook, where she introduced the artist to the art medallion. In 1997, he founded and was the first elected President of the Canadian Portrait Academy which thrives to this day.
In 2000, the artist moved back to Ontario to care for his grandmother. There he spent many hours sculpting and painting along the waterfront. It was then that the artist started to study
theosophy more and reflected on his iceberg themes in a more spiritual manner. In the same year he founded his private art collection, the "Corbet Collection of Canadian Women Artists" which serves as an educational visual tool to help teach people about the importance of women's roles in Canadian art history. This collection was influenced by the artist's close friendships with many of Canada's more important women artists who saw themselves as having been overshadowed by their male counterparts.
In 2003, Corbet accepted the position of
Forensic Artist with the
University of Western Ontario where he reconstructed the facial image of a 2,200 year old Egyptian mummy based on CT and laser scans. This work, a life-size sculpture, brought the artist greater acclaim and was featured in a two part documentary on the
Discovery Channel. He continues to do important anthropological reconstructions to this day. Also in 2003, Corbet had his first 10 year retrospective in his home town of
Ajax, Ontario.
In 2007 Corbet's first solo exhibition in
Guernsey, Channel Islands was celebrated with a special 18 person choral performance in his honour by the Guernsey Choir and Symphony and a quarter peal of the Vale Church bells upon his last day on the isle.
To date Corbet is represented in over 50 important museum and art gallery permanent collections around the world.
Recent works and noted subjects
Currently, Corbet continues to develop his iceberg themes as well as work on portrait medallions. As of early 2006 a principle canvas was created for the international charity
World Visionand was publicly unveiled on 26th March 2008.Mayor Hazel McCallion, CM lauded Corbet for this major canvas. He is also known as a mentor to many aspiring artists around the world, freely giving advice and more importantly encouraging their dreams and aspirations in all endeavours of life.
Corbet's recent works include a relief sculpture for the Cumberland County Museum and Archives of R. B. Dickey, which was lauded by the Premier of Nova Scotia
Rodney MacDonald. Other recent medallion commissions include Laura Muntz Lyall, William Bauld,
Sir Charles Tupper,
Sir Wilfred Grenfell among others.
Some of Corbet's more noted subjects include Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother,
Jane Goodall,
F. H. Varley,
Dorothy Livesay,
Jane Addams,
Jean Coulthard,
George Stanley,
Margaret Atwood,
Gutzon Borglum,
Louis Riel,
C. H. Chadderton, Samuel Torrey Orton, Sir
Winston Churchill and
Elizabeth Bradford Holbrook to name but a few. Corbet's works have been collected by over 50 international art galleries and museums and is represented in numerous publications including
Canadian Who's Who and
Who's Who in Canada.
An interesting note is that since his grandmother's death in 2004, Corbet has sculpted or painted her name, "Alice", in almost all his works.
Further Information
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