Douglas Haynes
Douglas Hector Haynes was a Canadian abstract artist and teacher.
Early life
Haynes was born and raised in Regina, Saskatchewan. He studied at Alberta's Provincial Institute of Technology and Art with Marion Nicoll, Ronald Spickett, and Illingworth Kerr, from 1954-1958, and the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, Netherlands in 1960-1961.Career
Haynes first became known for prints and painted constructions using burlap, string and other materials.Clement Greenberg wrote approvingly of Haynes' art in 1963, writing:"In Douglas Haynes' touched-up prints I was even more surprised to see the lay-out of Adolph Gottlieb's Burst paintings unabashedly present.... This lay-out was handled, all the same, with a certain felicity, so that I had to conclude that Haynes had added something of his own to the idea by reducing it in size".Speaking of Greenberg in 2006, Haynes remembered "how he didn't particularly like my Toledo paintings when he first saw them in the studio, but how he told me I was artistically right on when he caught the finished show at the Edmonton Art Gallery."
Elected a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 1974, Haynes was chairman of the Department of Art and Design at U of A, and ultimately held the title of professor emeritus.
In 2005, Haynes was the subject an episode of the nationally-broadcast art documentary series "Landscape As Muse", and is featured in Roald Nasgaard's 2008 book, "Abstract Painting in Canada." According to Nasgaard, "In 1975 Haynes turned overtly to using colour. In 1977 he met Jack Bush during the latter's retrospective show at the Edmonton Art Gallery, an encounter that set into motion a series of experiments, using some of Bush's devices, in "an attempt to get the colour to spread." The outcome was the Split-Diamond series, which signalled his maturity as a painter".