Finding the sophisticated woman behind the 'naïve' painter in Maudie
5 Question for Sally Hawkins, star of Maudie, a drama of the life of acclaimed Nova Scotia artist Maud Lewis.
By PETER HOWELL Movie Critic Fri. April 14, 2017
In the 1965 Star Weekly article that helped launch her to international fame, Nova Scotia folk artist Maud Lewis is referred to as a "natural primitive" for her unschooled paintings of bucolic country scenes.
It's an art world term, along with its variant "naïve art", but neither sits well with Sally Hawkins, the Oscar-nominated British actress (for Blue Jasmine) who brings the late Lewis majestically to life in Irish director Aisling Walsh's new film Maudie, now playing at Toronto's Varsity Cinemas.
Hawkins stars opposite Ethan Hawke, who plays Lewis's fishmonger husband Everett, in the movie that was filmed in Canada, with Newfoundland standing in for Nova Scotia.
"People call it 'naïve art', but there's no such thing, I think," Hawkins says from London.
"Maud's art is far from naïve. It just has a childlike innocence which is actually highly sophisticated. Her composition is highly sophisticated, and so is the way she uses colour and landscapes and things from her imagination. Things she's seeing in the everyday world around her: children playing in the street, oxen in the field and also Everett, who's on the boat. It's just beautiful."
That Star Weekly article, by the way, described Lewis, then 62, as "Canada's Grandma Moses" under the banner headline "The Little Old Lady Who Paints Pretty Pictures."
They were different times, to say the least, but Hawkins is delighted to be able to help celebrate the life story and artistry of Lewis, who died in 1970. This interview has been edited and condensed.
5 Question for Sally Hawkins, star of Maudie, a drama of the life of acclaimed Nova Scotia artist Maud Lewis.
By PETER HOWELL Movie Critic Fri. April 14, 2017
In the 1965 Star Weekly article that helped launch her to international fame, Nova Scotia folk artist Maud Lewis is referred to as a "natural primitive" for her unschooled paintings of bucolic country scenes.
It's an art world term, along with its variant "naïve art", but neither sits well with Sally Hawkins, the Oscar-nominated British actress (for Blue Jasmine) who brings the late Lewis majestically to life in Irish director Aisling Walsh's new film Maudie, now playing at Toronto's Varsity Cinemas.
Hawkins stars opposite Ethan Hawke, who plays Lewis's fishmonger husband Everett, in the movie that was filmed in Canada, with Newfoundland standing in for Nova Scotia.
"People call it 'naïve art', but there's no such thing, I think," Hawkins says from London.
"Maud's art is far from naïve. It just has a childlike innocence which is actually highly sophisticated. Her composition is highly sophisticated, and so is the way she uses colour and landscapes and things from her imagination. Things she's seeing in the everyday world around her: children playing in the street, oxen in the field and also Everett, who's on the boat. It's just beautiful."
That Star Weekly article, by the way, described Lewis, then 62, as "Canada's Grandma Moses" under the banner headline "The Little Old Lady Who Paints Pretty Pictures."
They were different times, to say the least, but Hawkins is delighted to be able to help celebrate the life story and artistry of Lewis, who died in 1970. This interview has been edited and condensed.