Artwork by Frank Johnston Wanted for Purchase and Consignment
For over 30 years Mayberry Fine Art has quietly brokered sales for countless Canadian and International works of art from private collections.
We provide complete services to confidentially assist you with the sale of complete collections or single works of art.
What to expect when selling or consigning your artwork with Mayberry Fine Art
- Use our Appraisal and Valuation form to send us details on the work(s) of art you may wish to sell. Some of the details we will need include.
- Artist Name
- Size (measurements)
- Date
- Signature
- When and where aquired
- Condition
- Good quality photograph
- After a fair market value has been agreed upon, we may need to examine the artwork for condition and authentication.
- In the case of larger works or collections which may be awkward to transport, we will visit your location to view the works.
- Crating and shipping is available when needed.
- Purchase options include outright purchase or consignment sale.
- Commission with regard to consignment sales is an agreed-upon percentage between Mayberry Fine Art and the seller. It is based on the value of the artwork. Commission on higher valued works can be as low as 5%.
- Unless specifically expressed otherwise all values and prices discussed or published are in Canadian funds.
Click here to complete the valuation form.
Frank Johnston
RCA1888 - 1949
"In Johnston one can almost see the sound swelling into the vastness of infinity. The small panel is no restriction to the eye and one stands among the stars of timeless space. Dancing formless light, subaqueous in feeling, ephemeral as Aurora Borealis. It holds one motionless in moving space."
Frank (Franz) Johnston was born in Toronto and like many other Group members, he joined Grip Ltd. as a commercial artist. In 1910, he left for the United States where he studied art in Philadelphia and worked in commercial design in New York. Although an original member of the Group, Johnston's association was a brief one. He did exhibit in the exhibition of 1920, but by 1921 he had left Toronto to become Principal at the Winnipeg School of Art. In the earlier years of their friendship, Johnston had joined MacDonald and Harris on their journeys to Algoma. His paintings from those years express a strong decorative interpretation of the landscape. In later years, the artist's style became more realistic and revealed a strong fascination with the qualities of light.
In 1927, Johnston changed his name to the more exotic title of 'Franz' Johnston, and found some success in commercial art galleries, where he was free from association with any formal group of artists.




