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Cleeve Horne

Arthur Edward Cleeve Horne
Born Arthur Edward Cleeve Horne
9 January 1912
Jamaica, British West Indies
Died 5 July 1998
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Nationality Canadian
Education Dorothy Dick, Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, Canada;
Known for Painter, Sculptor, designer.
Notable work "William Shakespeare", "Alexander Graham Bell", "Commander A.D. Chilcott"
Movement Post Modern, Contemporary
Awards Honorary academician of The Canadian Portrait Academy 2000

Arthur Edward Cleeve Horne, OC, O.Ont, RCA, OSA, SSC, CPA, AOCA (January 9, 1912 – July 5, 1998) was a Canadian portrait painter and sculptor.

Born in Jamaica, British West Indies, Horne, primarily a society painter, is thought to have painted over 400 portraits during his career ca.(1928–1991). His most notable subjects include Alexander Graham Bell, Claude Bissell, Bora Laskin, Pauline Mills McGibbon, Jeanne Sauvé and John Diefenbaker among many others.

At college he met Jean Harris (a sculpture student); they later married and had three sons. He lived the majority of his life in Toronto, raising himself to the mid-upper ranks of society by wise marketing and excellent business skills.

In Horne's early career, he wanted to become a portrait sculptor and studied under Dorothy Dick, a British sculptor, in 1927. Later he attended the Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, Canada 1931-1934 first studying sculpture under Emanuel Hahn but soon changing to portrait painting. He also studied portrait and landscape painting under John Wentworth Russell 1934-1935.

He was told by Emanuel Hahn, "A sculptor can never change his hand and become a painter." Horne, however, achieved much more acclaim as a painter than a sculptor.

Horne owned two houses that were both designed by prominent architectural firms. One was a permanent residence at 181 Balmoral Avenue in Toronto, built in 1952 and designed by Gordon Adamson. The other was a summer home at 1950 Concession 8 in Pickering, Ontario. The summer home was built in 1957 and designed by architects Michael Clifford and Kenneth Lewis, and features a hyperbolic paraboloid roof.


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