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Artworks
Nicholas Hornyansky Hungarian-Canadian, 1896-1965
Fort Mississauga, c 1940aquatint on paper
protected by museum glass4.5 x 6 insigned bottom rightCurrency:Further images
Nicholas Hornyansky’s Fort Mississauga unites poetic winter atmosphere with the weight of Niagara’s military history. He presents the fort’s square brick tower as a solitary, resilient presence above the frozen...Nicholas Hornyansky’s Fort Mississauga unites poetic winter atmosphere with the weight of Niagara’s military history. He presents the fort’s square brick tower as a solitary, resilient presence above the frozen shoreline, its pale walls standing against a sweeping blue sky, deep snowbanks, and the cold expanse of water beyond. The curving tracks in the snow, the bare trees, and the wind-stirred clouds give the scene a sense of exposure and stillness, while the fort itself becomes more than a building. It reads as a survivor of an older frontier.
That history deepens the image, because Fort Mississauga was built between 1814 and 1816 at the mouth of the Niagara River to replace Fort George and to serve as a counterweight to Fort Niagara on the American side. The site is distinguished by its tower and earthworks, and it remains the only surviving Canadian example of this type of fortification. In Hornyansky’s hands, the site is both a specific historic landmark and a symbol of endurance in the Canadian landscape.
Provenance
- private collection, Niagara Falls
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