Search by Name

Search by Name

Michael CLEARY Obituary

Michael Cleary, landscape watercolour artist, after a brief illness died quietly on Sunday, March 26, 2023 at the Royal Ascot Care Centre in Vancouver, BC. He was 93 years old. He is survived by his wife Patricia (nee Snider); his children Catherine Rogers (Michael Sheard), Stephen
Cleary (Tracey) and Pamela Cleary; and his grandchildren Laurel Rogers (Gerissen Tang), Sadie O'Hara (Griffin) and Charlie Cleary. Michael was a founding member of the Muskoka Autumn Studio Tour. The Tour, one of the first of its kind, featured local artists displaying their work in their own studios. He was a member of
the Canadian Federation of Artists and a Life Member of the Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour. He enjoyed leading painting workshops and sharing his insights with other
painters. In describing his art, Michael said: I was introduced to watercolour painting during my last years at grammar school in England. Since then I have studied oil painting, design and composition as well as various crafts. I have deliberately not taken any instruction in watercolour because I
wanted to work out my own methods and evolve my own symbols. In order to create work that is fresh and full of the detail that intrigues me, I paint outside in front of the subject in all seasons keeping studio painting to a minimum. Each painting is a unique reaction to the subject at the time it was painted, requiring several days in front of the subject, during which time light and weather conditions vary a great deal. The final result is a synthesis of all I have learned about the subject while the work was in progress. Michael was born in 1930 in Salisbury, England to parents Lucy and Frederick Cleary, and was an only child. He attended Camborne School of Mines and worked in West Africa before coming to Canada, where he worked in northern Ontario and the Yukon and completed his engineering degree at U of T. Starting in 1954, he served in the British Army Royal Engineers for two years as a Second Lieutenant in the Canal Zone (Egypt) and in Cyprus. While on leave, he travelled to Lebanon, Syria and Jordan. In 1956 he returned to Canada and worked in
Wawa, ON at the Helen Mine. In Wawa, he met and married the love of his life, Patricia Snider. They built an A-frame cabin on Wawa Lake (which is the heart home of the family to this day) and had their first two children. In 1964 they moved to southern Ontario, where Michael undertook a short second career as a
high school teacher and their third child was born. 1968 brought a move to Gravenhurst, ON where he embarked upon his life's work as a landscape watercolour artist. He found his subjects around Muskoka but also made regular trips to Algoma with other artists Lawrence Nickle and John Palmer. He also gradually went further afield on solo painting trips
that eventually ranged from coast to coast to coast. While painting skim ice on a beaver pond outside of Gravenhurst, Michael found himself
dreaming about a home at the location. The purchase of the property in 1978 led to Home Pond Studio, a home, workplace and studio that he largely designed and built himself. They moved into the house and studio in December 1979. In 1985, Pat left her career as an elementary school teacher and librarian to accompany Michael on his painting trips. Their trips included six months in the Yukon and three months on Baffin Island. In 1987 they sold Home Pond Studio and, in 1989 after returning from the Baffin Island, they moved to British Columbia. They lived in Eastgate near Manning Park and then on their catamaran sail boat before buying a home in Port Alberni in 2005. In 2000 and 2001, they
completed a circumnavigation of Vancouver Island on their sail boat. 2016 brought a move to an apartment overlooking a park in Vancouver. Michael continued to paint his wonderful paintings thorough all of these years, finishing his final painting in 2021. In the summer of 2022, both Michael and Pat had a lengthy stay in hospital due to COVID
infections. On discharge from hospital, they moved together to the Royal Ascot Care Centre, where Pat still lives in a room surrounded by Michael's paintings and family photos. Michael is deeply missed by his family. A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date in
Ontario. In honour of his memory, donations could be made to the Canadian Society of Painters In Water Colour at https://cspwc.ca/payments/ or the Alzheimer Society of British
Columbia at https://alzheimer.ca/bc/en/take-action/donate.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Muskoka Region News on Apr. 8, 2023.

Memories and Condolences
for Michael CLEARY

Not sure what to say?





4 Entries

John & Debi Davis

March 17, 2024

Michael and Pat, I am sure you won´t remember John and Debi Davis from Gravenhurst, but I have many of Michael´s framed prints in our home now in Huntsville. I have the number two print of between the Islands, Spikes Lake which became your home and many more. I am sorry to hear of Michael´s passing. May he enjoy some of the blessed peace his paintings have brought us.

Richard Stringer

November 27, 2023

I met Michael when he was working in Nanisivik, that was 1990s. I bought two of his water colours. He was a talented man and brought the Arctic to life.

John Dolson

August 17, 2023

My condolences to you and your family Pat. So sorry to here of Mike's passing. You may remember me. My Father and mother were Morris and Marj Dolson and we ran North Shore Propane. We were very privileged to be able to use your A frame on Wawa lake. I have many wonderful memories and photos if you should ever want them. My condolences and my email is
[email protected] if you want to get in touch. Sincerely their son, John Dolson

B R Clark

April 16, 2023

I was saddened to learn of Michael's passing.
Please accept my condolences.
I have many fond memories of time spent with Michael and family.
Take care

Showing 1 - 4 of 4 results

Memorial Events
for Michael CLEARY

To offer your sympathy during this difficult time, you can now have memorial trees planted in a National Forest in memory of your loved one.