Skip to Content
4th Meridian Art + Interiors
4th Meridian Home
Blog
Shop Art & More
About 4th Meridian Art
About Online Auctions
Contact
0
0
4th Meridian Art + Interiors
4th Meridian Home
Blog
Shop Art & More
About 4th Meridian Art
About Online Auctions
Contact
0
0
4th Meridian Home
Blog
Shop Art & More
About 4th Meridian Art
About Online Auctions
Contact
Shop Art & More Mount Assiniboine, woodblock print, signed Barleigh (Barbara Leighton)
Barleigh6.png Image 1 of 6
Barleigh6.png
Barleigh5.png Image 2 of 6
Barleigh5.png
Barleigh1.png Image 3 of 6
Barleigh1.png
Barleigh2.png Image 4 of 6
Barleigh2.png
Barleigh3.png Image 5 of 6
Barleigh3.png
Barleigh4.png Image 6 of 6
Barleigh4.png
Barleigh6.png
Barleigh5.png
Barleigh1.png
Barleigh2.png
Barleigh3.png
Barleigh4.png

Mount Assiniboine, woodblock print, signed Barleigh (Barbara Leighton)

CA$1,200.00
Sold

Mount Assiniboine
signed Barleigh (Barbara Leighton)
woodblock print
62/100
no date (ca. 1960s)

Framed 19” x 22” (image 12” x 15.5”)

Barbara Mary Harvey was born in Plymouth, England, in 1909. After her family moved to Alberta, she attended the Provincial Institute of Design and Technology in Calgary in 1930, where she met Alfred (A. C.) Leighton, her instructor and school’s director. They were married in the early morning of Sunday, May 31, 1931 and their honeymoon was spent packing into the Kananaskis area to paint.

After their marriage, Barbara Leighton continued to create woodblock prints and manage her husband’s career as well. She was elected to the Canadian Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1941, and belonged to the Alberta Society of Artists.

In 1941 the Leightons bought a farm in Chilliwack, BC and then built a house in Crescent Beach, near Vancouver. Barbara exhibited a colour woodblock print with the B.C. Society of Fine Arts in their annual exhibition in 1942.

A.C. Leighton felt the West Coast was too temperate for a landscape painter, so they moved back to Alberta, buying a house in Calgary.

In 1960, A. C. Leighton’s health began to deteriorate rapidly. They made a trip back to England for medical inquiries about his stomach ailment, but A. C. Leighton died in 1965 after his long illness.

Not wanting to sit around and feel sorry for herself, Barbara Leighton enrolled at Alberta College of Art and Design. In her mid-fifties, she received a diploma in fiber and metal crafts, and for two years won scholarships in Visual Arts.

For extra income after her husband's death, Barbara composed linocuts and woodcuts entirely from works by her husband, tracing his work and then making a number of woodblocks for colours. She usually produced editions of 100, and she produced a very limited amount of images, twenty-one in all. She signed her work “Barleigh”, a combination of her maiden and married surnames, She labelled each print “Block print from the original painting by A.C. Leighton, cut and printed by Barleigh.”

In 1970, Barbara turned her home in the Calgary Foothills into a gallery featuring the work of her husband and his contemporaries and a craft centre for artists and a teaching facility for children. The complex grew over the years and is now known as the Leighton Art Centre which is operated by a foundation established by Barbara in 1974.

In 1984, Barbara received the Alberta Achievement Award for her contribution to Alberta's arts.

Barbara Leighton died in 1986.

Please note: We can deliver for free in the Okanagan Valley, or to Calgary or Vancouver on one of our regular trips.

Add To Cart

Mount Assiniboine
signed Barleigh (Barbara Leighton)
woodblock print
62/100
no date (ca. 1960s)

Framed 19” x 22” (image 12” x 15.5”)

Barbara Mary Harvey was born in Plymouth, England, in 1909. After her family moved to Alberta, she attended the Provincial Institute of Design and Technology in Calgary in 1930, where she met Alfred (A. C.) Leighton, her instructor and school’s director. They were married in the early morning of Sunday, May 31, 1931 and their honeymoon was spent packing into the Kananaskis area to paint.

After their marriage, Barbara Leighton continued to create woodblock prints and manage her husband’s career as well. She was elected to the Canadian Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1941, and belonged to the Alberta Society of Artists.

In 1941 the Leightons bought a farm in Chilliwack, BC and then built a house in Crescent Beach, near Vancouver. Barbara exhibited a colour woodblock print with the B.C. Society of Fine Arts in their annual exhibition in 1942.

A.C. Leighton felt the West Coast was too temperate for a landscape painter, so they moved back to Alberta, buying a house in Calgary.

In 1960, A. C. Leighton’s health began to deteriorate rapidly. They made a trip back to England for medical inquiries about his stomach ailment, but A. C. Leighton died in 1965 after his long illness.

Not wanting to sit around and feel sorry for herself, Barbara Leighton enrolled at Alberta College of Art and Design. In her mid-fifties, she received a diploma in fiber and metal crafts, and for two years won scholarships in Visual Arts.

For extra income after her husband's death, Barbara composed linocuts and woodcuts entirely from works by her husband, tracing his work and then making a number of woodblocks for colours. She usually produced editions of 100, and she produced a very limited amount of images, twenty-one in all. She signed her work “Barleigh”, a combination of her maiden and married surnames, She labelled each print “Block print from the original painting by A.C. Leighton, cut and printed by Barleigh.”

In 1970, Barbara turned her home in the Calgary Foothills into a gallery featuring the work of her husband and his contemporaries and a craft centre for artists and a teaching facility for children. The complex grew over the years and is now known as the Leighton Art Centre which is operated by a foundation established by Barbara in 1974.

In 1984, Barbara received the Alberta Achievement Award for her contribution to Alberta's arts.

Barbara Leighton died in 1986.

Please note: We can deliver for free in the Okanagan Valley, or to Calgary or Vancouver on one of our regular trips.

Mount Assiniboine
signed Barleigh (Barbara Leighton)
woodblock print
62/100
no date (ca. 1960s)

Framed 19” x 22” (image 12” x 15.5”)

Barbara Mary Harvey was born in Plymouth, England, in 1909. After her family moved to Alberta, she attended the Provincial Institute of Design and Technology in Calgary in 1930, where she met Alfred (A. C.) Leighton, her instructor and school’s director. They were married in the early morning of Sunday, May 31, 1931 and their honeymoon was spent packing into the Kananaskis area to paint.

After their marriage, Barbara Leighton continued to create woodblock prints and manage her husband’s career as well. She was elected to the Canadian Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1941, and belonged to the Alberta Society of Artists.

In 1941 the Leightons bought a farm in Chilliwack, BC and then built a house in Crescent Beach, near Vancouver. Barbara exhibited a colour woodblock print with the B.C. Society of Fine Arts in their annual exhibition in 1942.

A.C. Leighton felt the West Coast was too temperate for a landscape painter, so they moved back to Alberta, buying a house in Calgary.

In 1960, A. C. Leighton’s health began to deteriorate rapidly. They made a trip back to England for medical inquiries about his stomach ailment, but A. C. Leighton died in 1965 after his long illness.

Not wanting to sit around and feel sorry for herself, Barbara Leighton enrolled at Alberta College of Art and Design. In her mid-fifties, she received a diploma in fiber and metal crafts, and for two years won scholarships in Visual Arts.

For extra income after her husband's death, Barbara composed linocuts and woodcuts entirely from works by her husband, tracing his work and then making a number of woodblocks for colours. She usually produced editions of 100, and she produced a very limited amount of images, twenty-one in all. She signed her work “Barleigh”, a combination of her maiden and married surnames, She labelled each print “Block print from the original painting by A.C. Leighton, cut and printed by Barleigh.”

In 1970, Barbara turned her home in the Calgary Foothills into a gallery featuring the work of her husband and his contemporaries and a craft centre for artists and a teaching facility for children. The complex grew over the years and is now known as the Leighton Art Centre which is operated by a foundation established by Barbara in 1974.

In 1984, Barbara received the Alberta Achievement Award for her contribution to Alberta's arts.

Barbara Leighton died in 1986.

Please note: We can deliver for free in the Okanagan Valley, or to Calgary or Vancouver on one of our regular trips.

More Art You Might Be Interested In

Michael Kluckner, hand coloured woodcut, Jasmine, 10/20 2001 Kluckner Jasmine2.png Kluckner Jasmine.png
Michael Kluckner, hand coloured woodcut, Jasmine, 10/20 2001
CA$650.00
Robert Shiozaki, rust and gold plate Shiozaki plate1.png Shiozaki plate4.png Shiozaki plate3.png
Robert Shiozaki, rust and gold plate
CA$150.00
Gordon Smith, LG III 2006, chine colle and drypoint etching Gordon Smith3.png Gordon Smith1.png
Gordon Smith, LG III 2006, chine colle and drypoint etching
CA$1,600.00
Charles van Sandwyk A Selection of Neighbourly Birds of the New World (Canada) hand coloured etchings, limited edition Sandwyk9.png Sandwyk4.png Sandwyk3.png Sandwyk5.png Sandwyk6.png Sandwyk1.png Sandwyk7.png Sandwyk8.png
Charles van Sandwyk A Selection of Neighbourly Birds of the New World (Canada) hand coloured etchings, limited edition
CA$4,500.00
Carl Rungius, etching and drypoint, Untitled, Grizzly Sow and Cubs Rungius grizzly3.png Rungius grizzly2.png Rungius grizzly4.png
Carl Rungius, etching and drypoint, Untitled, Grizzly Sow and Cubs
CA$7,000.00
 

4th Meridian Art & Auctions

Our original warehouse gallery shop in the Cannery Trade Centre is open
11 - 3 pm Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday.

#104 1475 Fairview Road, west entrance off Fairview

Our Naramata Shop will be open 12-5 Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday. More hours coming in June!
#4 126 Robinson, in the heart of the Village

Follow us on Instagram

4th Meridian Art & Auctions
104 1475 Fairview Road, Penticton BC.
Email: info@4thmeridian.ca
Leanne 250-488-0850
René 250-462-4969

Home
About Us
Online Auctions & Events
Contact Us

 
Looking forward to this as we stroll into summer! 
Thursday 4-7 in the ❤️ of the Village
#naramata 🌞
Penticton! All culinary titles (cookbooks, memoirs) are 35% off now!
@4th.meridian.art.auctions @cannerytradecentre
Before you settle in for a fabulous dinner @bistrolapinperdu drop by @4th.meridian.art.interiors for a browse. 
#vintage #collectibles #gifts #art #unexpected #objects #naramata
Two very special Carl Rungius etchings are available via our website. 
…
In 1904 Rungius traveled the Yukon with Charles Sheldon, and in 1910 he traveled to Banff, Alberta for the first time. In Banff Rungius found the ideal location for paint
Naramata scenes in our Naramata shop. 
…
Jan Little’s limited edition gliclée of her painting “Mr and Mrs Bunbuns Go to Heaven But Then Decide to Move Back to Naramata” 
(The bunny theme will be on the rise as we welco
Changing up the book theme in our shops this year! 📚
..
We are moving away from culinary deep dives (we still have some juicy ones in stock at our Penticton shop tho!) and over to international fiction with currents of science and art and mystery an
Available on our website, glorious Molly Lamb Bobak watercolour of a cluster of poppies. 
..
It’s a generous and gorgeous piece, 33” x 26.5”. Signed Molly Lamb B
..
Molly Lamb Bobak (1920-2014) was a distinguished Canadian artist an
Our Naramata shop is open Saturdays and in May we will be open 5 days. It’s a gorgeous time of year and the Village is bright and blossomy. This season we also have exclusive and exquisite lavender products including culinary lavender, soaps, a
 

Visit Us when you Visit Penticton

Copyright 2021-2025, 4th Meridian Art & Auctions