Showing 12513 results

Authority record

Scheinman, André

  • CA QUA02578
  • Person
  • 1952-

André Scheinman, a Heritage Preservation Consultant, was born in Toronto in 1952. He is a graduate of the University of Toronto (B.A.) and U. of T’s Faculty of Education (B.Ed.). Growing up with a deep love of nature/wilderness he worked as a canoe guide for a camp in Algonquin Park from 1971 – 1975 and also traveled extensively throughout the world during that period. Writing poetry from an early age, his work was included in an anthology of Toronto poets published by House of Anansi Press (T.O. Now,1969).

Deepening interest in historic/traditional structures and built-form, and, what is now often referred to as cultural landscapes led to enrollment in 1978 in an innovative program developed by the federal government (using the campus/facilities of St. Lawrence College, Brockville) which was designed to produce graduates with the range of interdisciplinary skills and understanding of the underlying principles to responsibly preserve our historic sites and built heritage. In 1980, upon graduation, André received the first annual Association of Preservation Technology (APT, now APTI) Award of Excellence for Student Achievement in a North American University or College preservation program.

Having worked as a professional consultant in the preservation of heritage sites, structures and cultural heritage landscapes for almost 30 years André has undertaken a wide range of projects including many national historic sites. André is a founding member of the Canadian Association of Heritage Preservation Consultants (now CAHP), and is a twenty-nine year member of both the Association for Preservation Technology (APT) and the International Committee on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS). He was honoured by ICOMOS in 1998 for his contribution to international conservation in reference to his involvement with the international delegation (1988) to the then Soviet Union toward the conservation of the World Heritage Site at Kisi.

Schaffer, F/O C.F.

  • CA QUA12416
  • Person

No information is known about this creator

Schaefer, Carl

  • CA QUA12387
  • Person

No information is known about this creator

Sch., H.

  • CA QUA09746
  • Person
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Scenic Enterprises Ltd.

  • CA QUA12140
  • Corporate body
  • n.d.

Scenic Enterprises Ltd. was a printer active in British Columbia.

Sceats, Godfrey

  • CA QUA10996
  • Person
  • fl. 1920s

No information is available about this creator.

Scantleburry, C.B.

  • CA QUA12139
  • Person
  • n.d.

C.B. Scantleburry was a photographer based in Belleville, ON.

Sawyer, William

  • CA QUA01032
  • Person
  • 1820-1889

William Sawyer was born to John and Agnes Brown Sawyer in Montreal, Quebec, November 9, 1820. His academic background is unknown, however it seems likely that he had some form of education given his level of literacy evident in later years. He found his first employment with a Montreal law firm at the age of fourteen. By the early 1840's Sawyer opened a studio in Montreal in the Moyer Building and sought commissions for portraits from the local citizenry. Although business was steady, it was not sufficient for Sawyer who was likely responsible for helping to support his step-mother (Ann Sutherland) and half-sister Elizabeth Sarah. In order to garner more business Sawyer became an itinerant painter travelling the north shore of Lake Ontario, ranging as far west as Toronto, Sawyer stopped at all the major centres in between.

Exhibition and promotion was a necessity for the itinerant painter. Sawyer exhibited at the Montreal Society of Artists in 1847, in the company of Krieghoff and several other artists. In 1867 he exhibited with the Society of Canadian Artists in Montreal, and in 1872 he sent works to the first exhibition of the Ontario Society of Artists at Toronto.

During Sawyer's travels, he met Eliza Jane Baxter in Kingston, whom he married November 18, 1851. With this added financial responsibility, Sawyer continued to travel, occasionally moving further afield. In 1852 Sawyer travelled to New York with his new wife but quickly returned and set up a studio in Kingston in the Gas Office Building. The studio did not last long and the Sawyers returned to Montreal in the same year. The Sawyers remained in Montreal until 1855 when Sawyer, likely due to Eliza's desire to be close to her family, permanently relocated in Kingston. Although settled in Kingston, Sawyer continued to work as an itinerant artist travelling along the north and south shores of Lake Ontario. Having some level of success during this time allowed Sawyer to travel to Europe in 1862 where he was able to view the work of some important portrait artists in Scotland, England, France, and Belgium.

Upon his return Sawyer divided his time between Kingston and Montreal. In Montreal he partnered with Edwin R. Turner in an “Art and Photographic Studio”, acting as both a painter and a photographer. In 1863 Sawyer’s reputation brought him a commission to paint a portrait of John A. Macdonald for the Kingston city hall , where several of his portraits of mayors were already hanging. His commissions extended to three speakers of the Senate, who engaged him to paint their portraits for the Library of Parliament, and to Sir William Edmond Logan, William Molson, Charles Tupper, and William Workman, as well as to senators Frank Smith and Robert Duncan Wilmot.

William Sawyer continued to be an active photographer, painter, and promoter of his work, until his death at age 69, in Kingston on December 9, 1889. Sawyer was survived by his wife, six sons and three daughters.

Sawyer, Margaret E.

  • CA QUA02322
  • Person
  • 1903-2003

Dr. Margaret E. MacKay Sawyer was a professor of physiology at Queen's University for almost forty years. She was born in New Glasgow Nova Scotia, and received her B.A and M.A in Biology from Dalhousie University. She then received her PhD in Biology in 1930 from McGill University, and continued her postdoctoral research at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Sawyer moved to Kingston in 1939 and started teaching Physiology at Queen's University: first as a fellow, then a lecturer, and finally as a professor. She continued her research alongside her teaching career and wrote numerous articles for academic journals, such as the American Journal of Physiology. After the passing of her first husband, Dr. Sawyer married Dr. G. Harold Ettinger - a colleague from the Physiology Department - in 1969. Because of this, she is sometime identified as Dr. Margaret Ettinger. She passed away in Kingston in 2003.

Sawrey-Cookson, Richard

  • CA QUA10789
  • Person
  • fl. 1930s

No information is available about this creator.

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