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Canadian art

Canadian art refers to the visual (including painting, photography, and printmaking) as well as plastic arts (such as sculpture) originating from the geographical area of contemporary Canada. Art in Canada is marked by thousands of years of habitation by Indigenous peoples followed by waves of immigration which included artists of European origins and subsequently by artists with heritage from countries all around the world. The nature of Canadian art reflects these diverse origins, as artists have taken their traditions and adapted these influences to reflect the reality of their lives in Canada.

The Jack Pine by Tom Thomson. Oil on canvas, 1916, in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada.

The Government of Canada has played a role in the development of Canadian culture, through the department of Canadian Heritage by giving grants to art galleries,[1] as well as establishing and funding art schools and colleges across the country, and through the Canada Council for the Arts (established in 1957), the national public arts funder, helping artists, art galleries and periodicals, thus contributing to the visual exposure of Canada`s heritage.[2] The Canada Council Art Bank also helps artists by buying and publicizing their work. The Canadian government has sponsored four official war art programs: the First World War Canadian War Memorials Fund (CWMF), the Second World War Canadian War Records (CWR), the Cold War Canadian Armed Forces Civilian Artists Program (CAFCAP), and the current Canadian Forces Artists Program (CFAP).[3]

The Group of Seven is often considered the first uniquely Canadian artistic group and style of painting;[4] however, this claim is challenged by scholars and artists.[5] Historically, the Catholic Church was the primary patron of art in early Canada, especially Quebec, and in later times, artists have combined British, French, and American artistic traditions, at times embracing European styles and at the same time, working to promote nationalism. Canadian art remains the combination of these various influences.

Indigenous art Edit

 
Haida totem pole, Thunderbird Park, British Columbia

Indigenous peoples were producing art in the territory that is now called Canada for thousands of years prior to the arrival of European settler colonists and the eventual establishment of Canada as a nation state. Like the peoples that produced them, Indigenous art traditions spanned territories that extended across the current national boundaries between Canada and the United States. Indigenous art traditions are often organized by art historians according to cultural, linguistic or regional groups, the most common regional distinctions being: Northwest Coast, Northwest Plateau, Plains, Eastern Woodlands, Subarctic, and Arctic.[6] As might be expected, art traditions vary enormously amongst and within these diverse groups. One thing that distinguishes Indigenous art from European traditions is a focus on art that tends to be made for "utilitarian, shamanistic or decorative purposes, or for pleasure", as Maria Tippett writes. Such objects might be "venerated or considered ephemeral objects".[7]

Many of the artworks preserved in museum collections date from the period after European contact and show evidence of the creative adoption and adaptation of European trade goods such as metal and glass beads. The distinct Métis cultures that have arisen from inter-cultural relationships with Europeans have also contributed new culturally hybrid art forms. During the 19th and the first half of the 20th century, the Canadian government pursued an active policy of assimilation toward Indigenous peoples. One of the instruments of this policy was the Indian Act, which banned manifestations of traditional religion and governance, such as the Sun Dance and the Potlatch, including the works of art associated with them.[8] It was not until the 1950s and 60s that Indigenous artists such as Mungo Martin,[9] Bill Reid,[10] and Norval Morrisseau[11] began to publicly renew and, in some cases, re-invent indigenous art traditions. Currently there are many Indigenous artists practicing in all media in Canada and two Indigenous artists, such as Edward Poitras[12] and Rebecca Belmore,[13] who have represented Canada at the prestigious Venice Biennale in 1995 and 2005, respectively. Toronto-based Cree artist Kent Monkman is the only Canadian artist to be commissioned by The Metropolitan Museum of Art. In 2019, he produced the diptych mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) as part of a new series of contemporary projects presented in the Met's Great Hall.[14]

French colonial period (1665–1759) Edit

 
Map of New France made by Samuel de Champlain in 1612.

Early explorers such as Samuel de Champlain made sketches of North American territory as they explored. They also documented conflicts between European colonizers and Indigenous peoples. For instance, a drawing by Champlain, published in 1613, depicts the battle between Champlain's party and the Haudenosaunee that took place in present-day Lake Champlain in 1609.[15]

The Roman Catholic Church in and around Quebec City was the first to provide artistic patronage.[16] Abbé Hughes Pommier is believed to be the first painter in New France. Pommier left France in 1664 and worked in various communities as a priest before taking up painting extensively. Painters in New France, such as Pommier and Claude François (known primarily as Frère Luc, believed in the ideals of High Renaissance art, which featured religious depictions often formally composed with seemingly classical clothing and settings.[17] Few artists during this early period signed their works, making attributions today difficult.

Near the end of the 17th century, the population of New France was growing steadily but the territory was increasingly isolated from France. Fewer artists arrived from Europe, but artists in New France continued with commissions from the Church. Two schools were established in New France to teach the arts and there were a number of artists working throughout New France up until the British Conquest.[18] Pierre Le Ber, from a wealthy Montreal family, is one of the most recognized artists from this period. Believed to be self-taught since he never left New France, Le Ber's work is widely admired. In particular, his depiction of the saint Marguerite Bourgeoys was hailed as "the single most moving image to survive from the French period" by Canadian art historian Dennis Reid.[19]

While early religious painting told little about everyday life, numerous ex-votos completed by amateur artists offered vivid impressions of life in New France. Ex-votos, or votive painting, were made as a way to thank God or the saints for answering a prayer. One of the best known examples of this type of work is Ex-voto des trois naufragés de Lévis (1754). Five youths were crossing the Saint Lawrence River at night when their boat overturned in rough water. Two girls drowned, weighed down by their heavy dresses, while two young men and one woman were able to hold on to the overturned boat until help arrived. Saint Anne is depicted in the sky, saving them. This work was donated to the church at Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré as an offering of thanks for the three lives saved.[20]

Early art in British North America Edit

The early ports of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland did not experience the same degree of artistic growth, largely due to their Protestant beliefs in simple church decoration which did not encourage artists or sculptors. However itinerant artists, painters who travelled to various communities to sell works, frequented the area. Dutch-born artist Gerard Edema is believed to have painted the first Newfoundland landscape in the early 18th century.[21]

British Colonial period (1759–1820) Edit

 
A View of Montreal in Canada, Taken from Isle St. Helena in 1762
by Thomas Davies

British Army topographers Edit

The battle for Quebec left numerous British soldiers garrisoned in strategic locations in the territory. While off-duty, many of these soldiers sketched and painted the Canadian land and people, which were often sold in European markets hungry for exotic, picturesque views of the colonies. Many officers in the regiments sent to North America had passed through the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich where watercolour painting was part of the curriculum[22] since watercolours were required by soldiers to record the land, as photography had not been invented.[23] Thomas Davies is championed as one of the most talented. Davies recorded the capture of Louisburg and Montreal among other scenes.[24] Many of Richard Short's drawings and watercolours were reproduced as prints to disseminate knowledge of British expansion. For instance, in 1761, Short’s sketches became the basis for a set of prints depicting the British conquest of Quebec City two years earlier.[25] Scottish-born George Heriot was one of the first artist-soldiers to settle in Canada and later produced Travels Through the Canadas in 1807 filled with his aquatint prints.[26] James Cockburn also was most prolific, creating views of Quebec City and its surroundings.[27] Forshaw Day worked as a draftsman at Her Majesty's Naval Yard from 1862–79 in Halifax, Nova Scotia then moved to Kingston, Ontario to teach drawing at the Royal Military College of Canada from 1879–97.

Lower Canada's Golden Age Edit

In the late 18th century, art in Lower Canada began to prosper due to a larger number of commissions from the public and Church construction. Portrait painting in particular is recognized from this period, as it allowed a higher degree of innovation and change. François Baillairgé was one of the first of this generation of artists. He returned to Montreal in 1781 after studying sculpture in London and Paris. The Rococo style influenced several Lower Canadian artists who aimed for the style's light and carefree painting. However, Baillairgé did not embrace Rococo, instead focusing on sculpture and teaching influenced by Neoclassicism.[28]

 
Joseph Légaré The Burning of the Parliament Building in Montreal, 1849.

Lower Canada's artists evolved independently from France as the connection was severed during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. While not living in Lower Canada, William Berczy participated in the period's artistic growth. He immigrated to North America from Europe, perhaps Saxony, and completed several important portraits of leading figures. For example, he painted three portraits of Kanien’kehá:ka leader Joseph Brant and his best known work, The Woolsley Family, painted in Quebec City in 1808–09. As the title of the latter painting suggests, the work features full-length portraits of all the members of the Woolsley family. It is celebrated in part because of its complex arrangement of figures, decorative floor panels, and the detailed view of the landscape through the open window.[29] Art historian J. Russell Harper believes this era of Canadian art was the first to develop a truly Canadian character.[30]

A second generation of artists continued this flourishing of artistic growth beginning around the 1820s. Joseph Légaré was trained as a decorative and copy painter. However, this did not inhibit his artistic creativity as he was one of the first Canadian artists to depict the local landscape. Légaré is best known for his depictions of disasters such as cholera plagues, rocks slides, and fires.[31] Antoine Plamondon, a student of Légaré, went on to study in France, the first French Canadian artist to do so in 48 years. Plamondon went on to become the most successful artist in this period, largely through religious and portrait commissions.[32]

Krieghoff and Kane Edit

The works of most early Canadian painters were heavily influenced by European trends. During the mid-19th century, Cornelius Krieghoff, a Dutch-born artist in Quebec, painted scenes of the life of the habitants (French-Canadian farmers). At about the same time, the Canadian artist Paul Kane painted pictures of Indigenous life around the Great Lakes, Western Canada and the Oregon Territories. The figure of "the Native" played different roles in art, among others from an "intermediary of the environment" to a model of political resistance".[33] Kane and other Western artists catered to the overseas demand for misleading and stereotypical images of violent Prairie warriors. Kane's dramatic painting The Death of Omoxesisixany (Big Snake) (1849–56) was his only work to be mass-produced and marketed in its own time.[34]

Art under the Dominion of Canada Edit

 
John Fraser's Summit Lake near Lenchoile, Bow River, Canadian Pacific Railway. (1886) Possibly Paget Peak and Sherbrooke Lake in British Columbia

Formed in 1867 by a group of professional painters, including John Fraser, John Bell-Smith, father of Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith and Adolphe Vogt, the Society of Canadian Artists in Montreal[35] represented the possibilities these artists felt in the city as an exhibiting place for the arts.[36] The group consisted of artists with diverse background, with many new Canadians and others of French heritage spread out over Ontario and Quebec. Without group philosophical or artistic objectives, most artists tended simply to please the public in order to produce income. Romanticism remained the predominant stylistic influence, with a growing appreciation for Realism originating with the Barbizon school as practiced by Canadians Homer Watson and Horatio Walker.[37] The Society however did not last beyond 1872.[38]

In 1872, the Ontario Society of Artists was founded in Toronto; it is still exhibiting today. The list of objectives drawn up by the founding executive in its constitution included the "fostering of Original Art in the province, the holding of Annual Exhibitions, the formation of an Art Library and Museum and School of Art", all goals that were fulfilled.[39][40]

In 1880, the Royal Canadian Academy was founded and it, too, is still active today. It was modelled after the British Royal Academy of Arts with a hierarchy of members, and provided a new national context and vehicle for the promotion of the visual arts.[41]][42] The RCA, under the leadership of Robert Harris, actively sought to place Canadian artists in international exhibitions, such as the Canadian Exhibition at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904.

Early 20th century Edit

The Canadian Art Club, in existence from 1907 to 1915, was formed in an effort to improve the quality of the various standard exhibitions. The founders of the Club were the painters Edmund Morris and Curtis Williamson, who attempted to establish higher standards through small, carefully hung shows. Membership of the Club was by invitation only. Homer Watson was the first president, and other members included William Brymner, Maurice Cullen, and James Wilson Morrice.[43]

The First World War sparked a wide range of artistic expression: photography, film, painting, prints, reproductions, illustration, posters, craft, sculpture, and memorials. Artists initiated some of this work themselves, but the Canadian government and private agencies sponsored the vast majority of it.[44]

Nationalism and the Group of Seven Edit

 
Group of Seven, ca. 1920
 
Red Maple by A.Y. Jackson from 1914

The Group of Seven asserted a distinct national identity combined with a common heritage stemming from early modernism in Europe, including Impressionism and Post-Impressionism.[45] Some of the later members worked as commercial artists at a Toronto company called Grip Ltd. where they were encouraged to paint outdoors in their spare time.[46] As mature artists, Influenced by the example of Tom Thomson, they painted works in the studio from sketches made on small panels while on location in Northern Ontario or in the environment closer to home.[47]

The group had its genesis at Toronto's Arts & Letters Club[47] before the First World War, though the war delayed its official formation until 1920. The eventual members were Franklin Carmichael, Lawren Harris, A. Y. Jackson, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J. E. H. MacDonald, and Frederick Varley. Harris helped, with Dr. James MacCallum, by funding the construction of the Studio building in Toronto in 1913 for some of the group's use as studio space.[47] He also helped fund many of the group's northern excursions beginning 1919 by having a box car outfitted with sleeping quarters and heat, then left at prearranged train track locations to be re-located when the group wanted to move or return.[48] These actions were possible due to Harris' family fortune and influence: his father had been secretary to the A. Harris company which amalgamated with Massey to form the Massey-Harris Company[47] which shipped most of its production by train.

Emily Carr and various other artists were associated with the Group of Seven but were not invited to be members. Tom Thomson, often referred to, but never officially a member, died in 1917 due to an accident on Canoe Lake in Northern Ontario.[49] In 1933, members of the Group of Seven decided to enlarge the group and formed the Canadian Group of Painters, made up of 28 artists from across the country.[50]

Today, particularly with the work of Tom Thomson, the Group of Seven and Emily Carr, Canadian art is reaching new highs in the Canadian auction market.[51] Tom Thomson`s work is especially recognized as a contribution to North American Post-Impressionism[52] and the Group of Seven mythology has become an important part of national identity.[53]

Beginning of non-objective art Edit

In the 1920s, Kathleen Munn, Bertram Brooker and Lowrie Warrener independently experimented with abstract or non-objective art in Canada.[54] Some of these artists viewed abstract art as a way to explore symbolism and mysticism as an integral part of their spirituality. After the Group of Seven was enlarged into the Canadian Group of Painters, in about 1936, Lawren Harris began to paint abstractly. These individual artists indirectly influenced the following generation of artists who would come to form groups of abstract art following World War II, by changing the definition of art in Canadian society and by encouraging young artists to explore abstract themes.[55]

Contemporaries of the Group of Seven Edit

 
Kathleen Morris's Village Street Scene, 1920

The Beaver Hall Group (1920-1922) in Montreal, a collective of eighteen painters and one sculptor, was founded just after the Group of Seven`s first show. It was named for a building at 305 Beaver Hall which provided a meeting and exhibition space.[56]

By the late 1930s, many Canadian artists began resenting the quasi-national institution the Group of Seven had become. As a result of a growing rejection of the view that the efforts of a group of artists based largely in Ontario constituted a national vision or oeuvre, many artists—notably those in Québec—began feeling ignored and undermined. Founded in 1938 in Montréal, Québec, the Eastern Group of Painters included Montréal artists whose common interest was painting and an art for art's sake aesthetic, not the espousal of a nationalist credo as was the case with the Group of Seven or the Canadian Group of Painters. The group's members included Alexander Bercovitch, Goodridge Roberts, Eric Goldberg, Jack Weldon Humphrey, John Goodwin Lyman, and Jori Smith. The Eastern Group of Painters was formed to restore variation of purpose, method, and geography to Canadian art. It evolved into the Contemporary Arts Society (Société d'art contemporain) which was formed in 1939 by John Goodwin Lyman to promote an awareness of modern art in Montréal.[57]

1930s regionalism Edit

Since the 1930s, Canadian painters have developed a wide range of highly individual styles and painted in different regions of Canada. Emily Carr became famous for her paintings of totem poles, native villages, and the forests of British Columbia. Jack Humphrey painted Saint John, New Brunswick, Carl Schaefer painted Hanover, Ontario, John Lyman painted the Laurentians, and a contingent of artists painted Baie St. Paul in Charlevoix County, Quebec.[58] Later painters who painted specific landscapes include the prairie painter William Kurelek.

After World War II Edit

The abstract painters Jean-Paul Riopelle and multi-media artist Michael Snow can be said to have an influence beyond Canadian borders.[59] Les Automatistes were a group of Québécois artistic dissidents from Montreal, Quebec, founded by Paul-Émile Borduas in the early 1940s.[60][61] It lasted till 1954, the year of the group`s last exhibition.[61] However, their artistic influence was not quickly felt in English Canada, or indeed much beyond Montreal.[62] The abstract art group Painters Eleven (1953-1960), founded in Toronto, particularly the artist William Ronald, who is credited with the group's formation, and Jack Bush, also had an important impact on modern art in Canada. Painters Eleven increased opportunities to exhibit by its members.[63]

Regina Five is the name given to five abstract painters, Kenneth Lochhead, Arthur McKay, Douglas Morton, Ted Godwin, and Ronald Bloore, who exhibited their works in the 1961 National Gallery of Canada's exhibition "Five Painters from Regina". Though not an organized group per se, the name stuck with the 'members' and the artists continued to show together.[64]

Canadian sculpture has been enriched by the walrus ivory and soapstone carvings of Inuit artists. These carvings show objects and activities from their daily lives, both modern and traditional, as well as scenes from their mythology.[65]

Contemporary art Edit

 
Interior of the Toronto Eaton Centre showing one of Michael Snow's best known sculptures, titled Flightstop, which depicts Canada geese in flight.
 
Mother Earth: The Legend of Aataentsic in Jacques-Cartier Park

The 1960s saw the emergence of several important local and regional developments in dialogue with international trends. Robert Murray, one of Canada`s foremost abstract sculptors, moved to New York City from Saskatchewan in 1960, and began his progression to International fame.[66]

In Toronto, Spadina Avenue in the 1960s became a hotspot for a loose affiliation of artists, notably Gordon Rayner, Graham Coughtry, and Robert Markle, who came to define the "Toronto look."[67]

Other notable moments when Canadian contemporary artists—as individuals or groups—have distinguished themselves through international recognition or collaborations:

Recent achievements of Canadian artists are showcased online at the Canada Council Art Bank site.[95]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ as, for instance, in the following example of a show funded by the Government of Canada at the Peel Art Gallery Museum + Archives, Brampton:"Putting a spotlight on Canada's Artistic Heritage". www.canada.ca. Government of Canada. January 14, 2020. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
  2. ^ "Canada Council for the Arts". www.linkedin.com. linked in. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  3. ^ Brandon, Laura (2021). War Art in Canada: A Critical History. Toronto: Art Canada Institute. ISBN 978-1-4871-0271-5.
  4. ^ Lynda Jessup (2001). Antimodernism and artistic experience: policing the boundaries of modernity. University of Toronto Press. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-8020-8354-8.
  5. ^ The essay collection Sightlines: Reading Contemporary Canadian Art (edited by Jessica Bradley and Lesley Johnstone, Montreal: Artexte Information Centre, 1994) contains a number of critical texts addressing the issues around the difficulty of establishing or even defining a Canadian identity.
  6. ^ . Canadian Museum of Civilization. Archived from the original on October 20, 2009. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
  7. ^ Tippett 2017, p. 14.
  8. ^ Tippett 2017, pp. 75.
  9. ^ Tippett 2017, pp. 77–78, 129–128, 132–133.
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  12. ^ Edward Poitras, Encyclopedia of Canada
  13. ^ Charleyboy, Lisa (March 15, 2014), First Nations artist Rebecca Belmore creates a blanket of beads, CBC News, from the original on November 12, 2015, retrieved March 23, 2021
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  16. ^ Harper, 3.
  17. ^ Harper, 4-5.
  18. ^ Harper, 19–20.
  19. ^ Reid, 10.
  20. ^ Harper, 14-15.
  21. ^ Harper, 27–28.
  22. ^ "Adamson, p.5."
  23. ^ Reid, 15.
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Further reading Edit

  • Adamson, Jeremy (1978). From Ocean to Ocean: Nineteenth Century Water Colour Painting in Canada. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario. ISBN 9780919876255. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  • Auger, Emily Elisabeth (2005), The way of Inuit art: aesthetics and history in and beyond the Arctic, McFarland, ISBN 0-7864-1888-5
  • Brandon, Laura (2021). War Art in Canada: A Critical History. Toronto: Art Canada Institute. ISBN 978-1-4871-0271-5.
  • Bryce, Alan D (2007), Art smart : the intelligent guide to investing in the Canadian art market, Dundurn Group, ISBN 9781550026764
  • Bradley, Jessica and Lesley Johnstone. (1994) Sightlines: Reading Contemporary Canadian Art. Montreal: Artexte Information Centre, . ISBN 2-9800632-9-0
  • Crandall, Richard C (2000), Inuit art: a history, McFarland, ISBN 0-7864-0711-5
  • Gérin, Annie; McLean, James S. (2009), Public art in Canada: critical perspectives, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 978-0-8020-9847-4
  • Harper, Russell. (1981) Painting in Canada: A History 2nd ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-6307-1
  • Jonaitis, Aldona (2006), Art of the Northwest coast, University of Washington Press, ISBN 978-1-55365-210-6
  • Murray, Joan (1999). Canadian Art in the Twentieth Century. Toronto: Dundurn. OCLC 260193722. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
  • Murray, Joan; Harris, Lawren (1993), The Best of the Group of Seven, McClelland & Stewart, ISBN 0-7710-6674-0
  • Murray, Joan (1972). Ontario Society of Artists: 100 Years. Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario.
  • Nasgaard, Roald (2008). Abstract Painting in Canada. Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 9781553653943. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  • Nowell, Iris. (2011), Painters Eleven:The Wild Ones of Canadian Art, Publishers Group West, ISBN 978-1-55365-590-9
  • Pearse, Harold (2006), From drawing to visual culture: a history of art education in Canada, McGill-Queen's University Press, ISBN 0-7735-3070-3
  • Robertson, Clive (2006), Policy Matters: Administrations of Art and Culture, YYZ Books, ISBN 0-920397-36-0
  • Reid, Dennis (2012). A Concise History of Canadian Painting (Third ed.). Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. Retrieved June 12, 2021.
  • Tippett, Maria (2017). Sculpture in Canada. Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 978-1-771-62094-9. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
  • Tippett, Maria (1993). By a Lady: Celebrating Three Centuries of Art by Canadian Women. Toronto: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-016955-5.
  • Walters, Evelyn (2005), The women of Beaver Hall: Canadian modernist painters, Dundurn Press, ISBN 1-55002-588-0
  • Whitelaw, Anne; Foss, Brian; Paikowsky, Sandra, eds. (2010). The Visual Arts in Canada: The Twentieth Century. Canada: Oxford. Retrieved March 17, 2021.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Art of Canada at Wikimedia Commons
  • Artists in Canada A CHIN (Canadian Heritage Information Network) Resource

canadian, magazine, canadian, magazine, refers, visual, including, painting, photography, printmaking, well, plastic, arts, such, sculpture, originating, from, geographical, area, contemporary, canada, canada, marked, thousands, years, habitation, indigenous, . For the magazine see Canadian Art magazine Canadian art refers to the visual including painting photography and printmaking as well as plastic arts such as sculpture originating from the geographical area of contemporary Canada Art in Canada is marked by thousands of years of habitation by Indigenous peoples followed by waves of immigration which included artists of European origins and subsequently by artists with heritage from countries all around the world The nature of Canadian art reflects these diverse origins as artists have taken their traditions and adapted these influences to reflect the reality of their lives in Canada The Jack Pine by Tom Thomson Oil on canvas 1916 in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada The Government of Canada has played a role in the development of Canadian culture through the department of Canadian Heritage by giving grants to art galleries 1 as well as establishing and funding art schools and colleges across the country and through the Canada Council for the Arts established in 1957 the national public arts funder helping artists art galleries and periodicals thus contributing to the visual exposure of Canada s heritage 2 The Canada Council Art Bank also helps artists by buying and publicizing their work The Canadian government has sponsored four official war art programs the First World War Canadian War Memorials Fund CWMF the Second World War Canadian War Records CWR the Cold War Canadian Armed Forces Civilian Artists Program CAFCAP and the current Canadian Forces Artists Program CFAP 3 The Group of Seven is often considered the first uniquely Canadian artistic group and style of painting 4 however this claim is challenged by scholars and artists 5 Historically the Catholic Church was the primary patron of art in early Canada especially Quebec and in later times artists have combined British French and American artistic traditions at times embracing European styles and at the same time working to promote nationalism Canadian art remains the combination of these various influences Contents 1 Indigenous art 2 French colonial period 1665 1759 2 1 Early art in British North America 3 British Colonial period 1759 1820 3 1 British Army topographers 3 2 Lower Canada s Golden Age 3 3 Krieghoff and Kane 4 Art under the Dominion of Canada 5 Early 20th century 5 1 Nationalism and the Group of Seven 5 2 Beginning of non objective art 5 3 Contemporaries of the Group of Seven 5 4 1930s regionalism 6 After World War II 7 Contemporary art 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksIndigenous art EditMain article Visual arts by indigenous peoples of the Americas nbsp Haida totem pole Thunderbird Park British ColumbiaIndigenous peoples were producing art in the territory that is now called Canada for thousands of years prior to the arrival of European settler colonists and the eventual establishment of Canada as a nation state Like the peoples that produced them Indigenous art traditions spanned territories that extended across the current national boundaries between Canada and the United States Indigenous art traditions are often organized by art historians according to cultural linguistic or regional groups the most common regional distinctions being Northwest Coast Northwest Plateau Plains Eastern Woodlands Subarctic and Arctic 6 As might be expected art traditions vary enormously amongst and within these diverse groups One thing that distinguishes Indigenous art from European traditions is a focus on art that tends to be made for utilitarian shamanistic or decorative purposes or for pleasure as Maria Tippett writes Such objects might be venerated or considered ephemeral objects 7 Many of the artworks preserved in museum collections date from the period after European contact and show evidence of the creative adoption and adaptation of European trade goods such as metal and glass beads The distinct Metis cultures that have arisen from inter cultural relationships with Europeans have also contributed new culturally hybrid art forms During the 19th and the first half of the 20th century the Canadian government pursued an active policy of assimilation toward Indigenous peoples One of the instruments of this policy was the Indian Act which banned manifestations of traditional religion and governance such as the Sun Dance and the Potlatch including the works of art associated with them 8 It was not until the 1950s and 60s that Indigenous artists such as Mungo Martin 9 Bill Reid 10 and Norval Morrisseau 11 began to publicly renew and in some cases re invent indigenous art traditions Currently there are many Indigenous artists practicing in all media in Canada and two Indigenous artists such as Edward Poitras 12 and Rebecca Belmore 13 who have represented Canada at the prestigious Venice Biennale in 1995 and 2005 respectively Toronto based Cree artist Kent Monkman is the only Canadian artist to be commissioned by The Metropolitan Museum of Art In 2019 he produced the diptych mistikosiwak Wooden Boat People as part of a new series of contemporary projects presented in the Met s Great Hall 14 French colonial period 1665 1759 Edit nbsp Map of New France made by Samuel de Champlain in 1612 Early explorers such as Samuel de Champlain made sketches of North American territory as they explored They also documented conflicts between European colonizers and Indigenous peoples For instance a drawing by Champlain published in 1613 depicts the battle between Champlain s party and the Haudenosaunee that took place in present day Lake Champlain in 1609 15 The Roman Catholic Church in and around Quebec City was the first to provide artistic patronage 16 Abbe Hughes Pommier is believed to be the first painter in New France Pommier left France in 1664 and worked in various communities as a priest before taking up painting extensively Painters in New France such as Pommier and Claude Francois known primarily as Frere Luc believed in the ideals of High Renaissance art which featured religious depictions often formally composed with seemingly classical clothing and settings 17 Few artists during this early period signed their works making attributions today difficult Near the end of the 17th century the population of New France was growing steadily but the territory was increasingly isolated from France Fewer artists arrived from Europe but artists in New France continued with commissions from the Church Two schools were established in New France to teach the arts and there were a number of artists working throughout New France up until the British Conquest 18 Pierre Le Ber from a wealthy Montreal family is one of the most recognized artists from this period Believed to be self taught since he never left New France Le Ber s work is widely admired In particular his depiction of the saint Marguerite Bourgeoys was hailed as the single most moving image to survive from the French period by Canadian art historian Dennis Reid 19 While early religious painting told little about everyday life numerous ex votos completed by amateur artists offered vivid impressions of life in New France Ex votos or votive painting were made as a way to thank God or the saints for answering a prayer One of the best known examples of this type of work is Ex voto des trois naufrages de Levis 1754 Five youths were crossing the Saint Lawrence River at night when their boat overturned in rough water Two girls drowned weighed down by their heavy dresses while two young men and one woman were able to hold on to the overturned boat until help arrived Saint Anne is depicted in the sky saving them This work was donated to the church at Sainte Anne de Beaupre as an offering of thanks for the three lives saved 20 Early art in British North America Edit The early ports of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland did not experience the same degree of artistic growth largely due to their Protestant beliefs in simple church decoration which did not encourage artists or sculptors However itinerant artists painters who travelled to various communities to sell works frequented the area Dutch born artist Gerard Edema is believed to have painted the first Newfoundland landscape in the early 18th century 21 British Colonial period 1759 1820 Edit nbsp A View of Montreal in Canada Taken from Isle St Helena in 1762 by Thomas DaviesBritish Army topographers Edit The battle for Quebec left numerous British soldiers garrisoned in strategic locations in the territory While off duty many of these soldiers sketched and painted the Canadian land and people which were often sold in European markets hungry for exotic picturesque views of the colonies Many officers in the regiments sent to North America had passed through the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich where watercolour painting was part of the curriculum 22 since watercolours were required by soldiers to record the land as photography had not been invented 23 Thomas Davies is championed as one of the most talented Davies recorded the capture of Louisburg and Montreal among other scenes 24 Many of Richard Short s drawings and watercolours were reproduced as prints to disseminate knowledge of British expansion For instance in 1761 Short s sketches became the basis for a set of prints depicting the British conquest of Quebec City two years earlier 25 Scottish born George Heriot was one of the first artist soldiers to settle in Canada and later produced Travels Through the Canadas in 1807 filled with his aquatint prints 26 James Cockburn also was most prolific creating views of Quebec City and its surroundings 27 Forshaw Day worked as a draftsman at Her Majesty s Naval Yard from 1862 79 in Halifax Nova Scotia then moved to Kingston Ontario to teach drawing at the Royal Military College of Canada from 1879 97 Lower Canada s Golden Age Edit In the late 18th century art in Lower Canada began to prosper due to a larger number of commissions from the public and Church construction Portrait painting in particular is recognized from this period as it allowed a higher degree of innovation and change Francois Baillairge was one of the first of this generation of artists He returned to Montreal in 1781 after studying sculpture in London and Paris The Rococo style influenced several Lower Canadian artists who aimed for the style s light and carefree painting However Baillairge did not embrace Rococo instead focusing on sculpture and teaching influenced by Neoclassicism 28 nbsp Joseph Legare The Burning of the Parliament Building in Montreal 1849 Lower Canada s artists evolved independently from France as the connection was severed during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars While not living in Lower Canada William Berczy participated in the period s artistic growth He immigrated to North America from Europe perhaps Saxony and completed several important portraits of leading figures For example he painted three portraits of Kanien keha ka leader Joseph Brant and his best known work The Woolsley Family painted in Quebec City in 1808 09 As the title of the latter painting suggests the work features full length portraits of all the members of the Woolsley family It is celebrated in part because of its complex arrangement of figures decorative floor panels and the detailed view of the landscape through the open window 29 Art historian J Russell Harper believes this era of Canadian art was the first to develop a truly Canadian character 30 A second generation of artists continued this flourishing of artistic growth beginning around the 1820s Joseph Legare was trained as a decorative and copy painter However this did not inhibit his artistic creativity as he was one of the first Canadian artists to depict the local landscape Legare is best known for his depictions of disasters such as cholera plagues rocks slides and fires 31 Antoine Plamondon a student of Legare went on to study in France the first French Canadian artist to do so in 48 years Plamondon went on to become the most successful artist in this period largely through religious and portrait commissions 32 Krieghoff and Kane Edit The works of most early Canadian painters were heavily influenced by European trends During the mid 19th century Cornelius Krieghoff a Dutch born artist in Quebec painted scenes of the life of the habitants French Canadian farmers At about the same time the Canadian artist Paul Kane painted pictures of Indigenous life around the Great Lakes Western Canada and the Oregon Territories The figure of the Native played different roles in art among others from an intermediary of the environment to a model of political resistance 33 Kane and other Western artists catered to the overseas demand for misleading and stereotypical images of violent Prairie warriors Kane s dramatic painting The Death of Omoxesisixany Big Snake 1849 56 was his only work to be mass produced and marketed in its own time 34 Art under the Dominion of Canada EditMain articles Ontario Society of Artists and Royal Canadian Academy nbsp John Fraser s Summit Lake near Lenchoile Bow River Canadian Pacific Railway 1886 Possibly Paget Peak and Sherbrooke Lake in British ColumbiaFormed in 1867 by a group of professional painters including John Fraser John Bell Smith father of Frederic Marlett Bell Smith and Adolphe Vogt the Society of Canadian Artists in Montreal 35 represented the possibilities these artists felt in the city as an exhibiting place for the arts 36 The group consisted of artists with diverse background with many new Canadians and others of French heritage spread out over Ontario and Quebec Without group philosophical or artistic objectives most artists tended simply to please the public in order to produce income Romanticism remained the predominant stylistic influence with a growing appreciation for Realism originating with the Barbizon school as practiced by Canadians Homer Watson and Horatio Walker 37 The Society however did not last beyond 1872 38 In 1872 the Ontario Society of Artists was founded in Toronto it is still exhibiting today The list of objectives drawn up by the founding executive in its constitution included the fostering of Original Art in the province the holding of Annual Exhibitions the formation of an Art Library and Museum and School of Art all goals that were fulfilled 39 40 In 1880 the Royal Canadian Academy was founded and it too is still active today It was modelled after the British Royal Academy of Arts with a hierarchy of members and provided a new national context and vehicle for the promotion of the visual arts 41 42 The RCA under the leadership of Robert Harris actively sought to place Canadian artists in international exhibitions such as the Canadian Exhibition at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904 Early 20th century EditMain articles Canadian Art Club Group of Seven artists and Canadian Group of Painters The Canadian Art Club in existence from 1907 to 1915 was formed in an effort to improve the quality of the various standard exhibitions The founders of the Club were the painters Edmund Morris and Curtis Williamson who attempted to establish higher standards through small carefully hung shows Membership of the Club was by invitation only Homer Watson was the first president and other members included William Brymner Maurice Cullen and James Wilson Morrice 43 The First World War sparked a wide range of artistic expression photography film painting prints reproductions illustration posters craft sculpture and memorials Artists initiated some of this work themselves but the Canadian government and private agencies sponsored the vast majority of it 44 Nationalism and the Group of Seven Edit nbsp Group of Seven ca 1920 nbsp Red Maple by A Y Jackson from 1914The Group of Seven asserted a distinct national identity combined with a common heritage stemming from early modernism in Europe including Impressionism and Post Impressionism 45 Some of the later members worked as commercial artists at a Toronto company called Grip Ltd where they were encouraged to paint outdoors in their spare time 46 As mature artists Influenced by the example of Tom Thomson they painted works in the studio from sketches made on small panels while on location in Northern Ontario or in the environment closer to home 47 The group had its genesis at Toronto s Arts amp Letters Club 47 before the First World War though the war delayed its official formation until 1920 The eventual members were Franklin Carmichael Lawren Harris A Y Jackson Frank Johnston Arthur Lismer J E H MacDonald and Frederick Varley Harris helped with Dr James MacCallum by funding the construction of the Studio building in Toronto in 1913 for some of the group s use as studio space 47 He also helped fund many of the group s northern excursions beginning 1919 by having a box car outfitted with sleeping quarters and heat then left at prearranged train track locations to be re located when the group wanted to move or return 48 These actions were possible due to Harris family fortune and influence his father had been secretary to the A Harris company which amalgamated with Massey to form the Massey Harris Company 47 which shipped most of its production by train Emily Carr and various other artists were associated with the Group of Seven but were not invited to be members Tom Thomson often referred to but never officially a member died in 1917 due to an accident on Canoe Lake in Northern Ontario 49 In 1933 members of the Group of Seven decided to enlarge the group and formed the Canadian Group of Painters made up of 28 artists from across the country 50 Today particularly with the work of Tom Thomson the Group of Seven and Emily Carr Canadian art is reaching new highs in the Canadian auction market 51 Tom Thomson s work is especially recognized as a contribution to North American Post Impressionism 52 and the Group of Seven mythology has become an important part of national identity 53 Beginning of non objective art Edit In the 1920s Kathleen Munn Bertram Brooker and Lowrie Warrener independently experimented with abstract or non objective art in Canada 54 Some of these artists viewed abstract art as a way to explore symbolism and mysticism as an integral part of their spirituality After the Group of Seven was enlarged into the Canadian Group of Painters in about 1936 Lawren Harris began to paint abstractly These individual artists indirectly influenced the following generation of artists who would come to form groups of abstract art following World War II by changing the definition of art in Canadian society and by encouraging young artists to explore abstract themes 55 Contemporaries of the Group of Seven Edit Main articles Beaver Hall Group Eastern Group of Painters and Contemporary Arts Society nbsp Kathleen Morris s Village Street Scene 1920The Beaver Hall Group 1920 1922 in Montreal a collective of eighteen painters and one sculptor was founded just after the Group of Seven s first show It was named for a building at 305 Beaver Hall which provided a meeting and exhibition space 56 By the late 1930s many Canadian artists began resenting the quasi national institution the Group of Seven had become As a result of a growing rejection of the view that the efforts of a group of artists based largely in Ontario constituted a national vision or oeuvre many artists notably those in Quebec began feeling ignored and undermined Founded in 1938 in Montreal Quebec the Eastern Group of Painters included Montreal artists whose common interest was painting and an art for art s sake aesthetic not the espousal of a nationalist credo as was the case with the Group of Seven or the Canadian Group of Painters The group s members included Alexander Bercovitch Goodridge Roberts Eric Goldberg Jack Weldon Humphrey John Goodwin Lyman and Jori Smith The Eastern Group of Painters was formed to restore variation of purpose method and geography to Canadian art It evolved into the Contemporary Arts Society Societe d art contemporain which was formed in 1939 by John Goodwin Lyman to promote an awareness of modern art in Montreal 57 1930s regionalism Edit Since the 1930s Canadian painters have developed a wide range of highly individual styles and painted in different regions of Canada Emily Carr became famous for her paintings of totem poles native villages and the forests of British Columbia Jack Humphrey painted Saint John New Brunswick Carl Schaefer painted Hanover Ontario John Lyman painted the Laurentians and a contingent of artists painted Baie St Paul in Charlevoix County Quebec 58 Later painters who painted specific landscapes include the prairie painter William Kurelek After World War II EditMain articles Les Automatistes Painters Eleven and Regina Five The abstract painters Jean Paul Riopelle and multi media artist Michael Snow can be said to have an influence beyond Canadian borders 59 Les Automatistes were a group of Quebecois artistic dissidents from Montreal Quebec founded by Paul Emile Borduas in the early 1940s 60 61 It lasted till 1954 the year of the group s last exhibition 61 However their artistic influence was not quickly felt in English Canada or indeed much beyond Montreal 62 The abstract art group Painters Eleven 1953 1960 founded in Toronto particularly the artist William Ronald who is credited with the group s formation and Jack Bush also had an important impact on modern art in Canada Painters Eleven increased opportunities to exhibit by its members 63 Regina Five is the name given to five abstract painters Kenneth Lochhead Arthur McKay Douglas Morton Ted Godwin and Ronald Bloore who exhibited their works in the 1961 National Gallery of Canada s exhibition Five Painters from Regina Though not an organized group per se the name stuck with the members and the artists continued to show together 64 Canadian sculpture has been enriched by the walrus ivory and soapstone carvings of Inuit artists These carvings show objects and activities from their daily lives both modern and traditional as well as scenes from their mythology 65 Contemporary art Edit nbsp Interior of the Toronto Eaton Centre showing one of Michael Snow s best known sculptures titled Flightstop which depicts Canada geese in flight nbsp Mother Earth The Legend of Aataentsic in Jacques Cartier ParkThe 1960s saw the emergence of several important local and regional developments in dialogue with international trends Robert Murray one of Canada s foremost abstract sculptors moved to New York City from Saskatchewan in 1960 and began his progression to International fame 66 In Toronto Spadina Avenue in the 1960s became a hotspot for a loose affiliation of artists notably Gordon Rayner Graham Coughtry and Robert Markle who came to define the Toronto look 67 Other notable moments when Canadian contemporary artists as individuals or groups have distinguished themselves through international recognition or collaborations The interdisciplinary art practice and international success of Michael Snow began in the 1960s 68 Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University NSCAD From 1967 to 1990 Garry Neill Kennedy as President remade the College into an international centre for artistic activity and invited notable artists to come to NSCAD as visiting artists particularly those involved in conceptual art 69 Artists who made significant contributions during this period include Vito Acconci Sol LeWitt Dan Graham Eric Fischl Lawrence Weiner Joseph Beuys and Claes Oldenburg 70 Krzysztof Wodiczko became an artist in residence at NSCAD in 1976 and taught there till 1981 In 1984 he became a Canadian citizen but went on to increasing fame in New York 71 AA Bronson Felix Partz and Jorge Zontal under the name of General Idea active from 1967 to 1994 achieved international success 72 73 The video art and photography of David Askevold an early and highly influential contributor to the development and pedagogy of the conceptual art movement occurred He was invited to NSCAD in 1968 74 His work is included in the collection of New York s Museum of Modern Art 75 CAR later CARFAC in French Le Front des artistes canadiens was founded in Ontario by Jack Chambers with the aid of Tony Urquhart and Kim Ondaatje in 1968 ensuring the recognition of artists copyrights 76 Due to it Canada became the first country to pay mandatory exhibition fees to artists 77 In Moncton the creation of a fine arts department at the nascent Universite de Moncton in 1963 78 was headed by sculptor Claude Roussel who was representative of CARFAC 79 in New Brunswick and attended the first national conference in Winnipeg of CAR 1971 80 Colin Campbell 81 and Lisa Steele 82 began their pioneering early video art in Toronto in the early 1970s Steele s Birthday Suit with scars and defects 1974 is a classic In Vancouver Ian Wallace was particularly influential in nurturing an international dialogue through his teaching and exchange programs from 1972 on when he was hired at the Emily Carr University of Art and Design formerly the Vancouver School of Art He also encouraged visits from influential figures such as Lucy Lippard and Robert Smithson which exposed younger artists to conceptual art 83 The Vancouver School of Photoconceptualism including Jeff Wall Rodney Graham and Stan Douglas began in the 1980s 84 In 1981 Arnaud Maggs worked on three grid based portrait works documenting members of Toronto s art and cultural community 48 Views Turning and Downwind Together these works form an extensive visual archive a kind of who s who of the Toronto arts and culture scene in the 1980s 85 The career of Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller who represented Canada at the 49th Venice Biennial in 2001 became internationally successful 86 The films of Mark Lewis who represented Canada at the Venice Biennale in 2009 have been exhibited in solo museum shows at the Musee du Louvre Paris 2014 The Power Plant Toronto 2015 the Art Gallery of Ontario which organized Mark Lewis Canada 2017 87 the Museo de Arte de Sao Paulo MASP 2020 88 and at numerous other international venues His work has been purchased for public collections world wide 89 The paintings of Steven Shearer who represented Canada in the Venice Biennale in 2011 are increasingly sought after and shown at international galleries 90 The ceramic figure work of Shary Boyle who represented Canada in the Venice Biennale in 2013 is increasingly recognized internationally 91 92 Geoffrey Farmer who represented Canada in the Venice Biennale in 2017 has attracted significant international media attention in international publications contributing to a global conversation about contemporary art in Canada particularly for his show titled A Way Out of the Mirror 93 In 2019 New York s Metropolitan Museum of Art commissioned Kent Monkman to produce the diptych mistikosiwak Wooden Boat People 2019 as part of a new series of contemporary projects presented in its Great Hall In 2020 The Met acquired the dipytch which consists of the paintings Welcoming the Newcomers and Resurgence of the People 94 Recent achievements of Canadian artists are showcased online at the Canada Council Art Bank site 95 See also Edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp Art portalDance in Canada Art of Newfoundland and Labrador Beaver Hall Group Canadian Group of Painters Eastern Group of Painters Edmonton Contemporary Artists Society General Idea Group of Seven Indian Group of Seven Les Automatistes Les Plasticiens List of Canadian artists List of Canadian art awards List of Canadian painters National Gallery of Canada Painters Eleven Pedimental sculptures in Canada Regina Five Woodlands School Vancouver SchoolReferences Edit as for instance in the following example of a show funded by the Government of Canada at the Peel Art Gallery Museum Archives Brampton Putting a spotlight on Canada s Artistic Heritage www canada ca Government of Canada January 14 2020 Retrieved March 24 2021 Canada Council for the Arts www linkedin com linked in Retrieved March 23 2021 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Lynda Jessup 2001 Antimodernism and artistic experience policing the boundaries of modernity University of Toronto Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 8020 8354 8 The essay collection Sightlines Reading Contemporary Canadian Art edited by Jessica Bradley and Lesley Johnstone Montreal Artexte Information Centre 1994 contains a number of critical texts addressing the issues around the difficulty of establishing or even defining a Canadian identity Exhibitions Canadian Museum of Civilization Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Retrieved March 24 2021 Tippett 2017 p 14 Tippett 2017 pp 75 Tippett 2017 pp 77 78 129 128 132 133 Bill Reid The Canadian Encyclopedia Norval Morrisseau Archived from the original on February 10 2018 Retrieved March 23 2021 Edward Poitras Encyclopedia of Canada Charleyboy Lisa March 15 2014 First Nations artist Rebecca Belmore creates a blanket of beads CBC News archived from the original on November 12 2015 retrieved March 23 2021 Madill Shirley 2022 Kent Monkman Life amp Work Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0280 7 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Harper 3 Harper 4 5 Harper 19 20 Reid 10 Harper 14 15 Harper 27 28 Adamson p 5 Reid 15 Reid 16 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Reid 19 Adamson p 5 Harper 56 62 Reid 28 Harper 67 Reid 42 Reid 42 Vigneault Louise 2015 Portraying Indigenous Peoples in Nineteenth Century Art Conciliatory Resistant Immutable Embracing Canada Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven Ian M Thom ed Vancouver and London Eng Vancouver Art Gallery and Black Dog Publishing pp 17 23 Retrieved May 20 2021 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Adamson p 12 Reid 80 Harper 179 81 Adamson p 12 Murray 1972 p 5 The Founding of the Society and its First Exhibition Archives of Ontario Archived from the original on September 7 2015 Retrieved March 23 2021 Adamson p 14 Records of the Founding of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts Toronto Globe Printing Co 1879 80 ISBN 9780665132964 Canadian Art Club www oxfordreference com Oxford Reference Retrieved March 26 2021 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute Murray 1999 p 32 Murray amp Harris 1993 p 8 a b c d Murray amp Harris 1993 p 9 Murray amp Harris 1993 p 11 Murray 1999 p 22ff Murray 1999 p 78 Dixon Guy December 19 2017 Canadian Art Reaching New Summits The Globe and Mail Globe and Mail Dec 19 2017 Retrieved March 21 2021 Murray Joan Tom Thomson The Advent of Modernism Post Impressionism and North American Art 1900 1918 Peter Morrin William C Agee Judith Zilczer High Museum of Art Atlanta Georgia Retrieved March 21 2021 Edwardson Ryan 2004 A Canadian Modernism The Pre Group of Seven Algonquin School 1912 17 British Journal of Canadian Studies 17 1 81 92 doi 10 3828 bjcs 17 1 6 Retrieved March 21 2021 Murray 1999 p 38ff Nasgaard 14 Murray 1999 p 34ff Murray 1999 p 80 Murray 1999 p 63 Murray 1999 p 93 140 Nasgaard Roald 2009 The Automatiste Revolution in Painting The Automatist Revolution Roald Nasgaard and Ray Ellenwood Vancouver BC D amp M Publishers Inc p 7 a b Murray 1999 p 96 Norwell Iris 2011 Painters Eleven The Wild Ones of Canadian Art Publishers Group West ISBN 978 1 55365 590 9 Murray 1999 p 101 Terry Fenton ECAS And What It Stands For ECAS 15th Annual Exhibition catalogue essay Tippett 2017 pp 71 73 126 128 227 229 Boyanoski Christine 2010 Sculpture before 1960 The Visual Arts in Canada the Twentieth Century Foss Brian Paikowsky Sandra Whitelaw Anne eds Don Mills Ont Oxford University Press p 173 ISBN 978 0 19 542125 5 OCLC 432401392 Peter Goddard Remembering Toronto s 1960s Spadina Art Scene Archived 2015 01 04 at the Wayback Machine Canadian Art July 11 2014 Murray 1999 p 140 Garry Neill Kennedy www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved March 20 2021 Stacey Robert Wylie Liz 1988 Eighty Twenty 100 Years at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design Halifax Art Gallery of Nova Scotia p 78 80 Retrieved March 26 2021 Krzysztof Wodiczko art21 org Art21 Retrieved March 21 2021 Murray 1999 p 176 General Idea www tate org Tate Gallery London UK Retrieved March 21 2021 David Askevoid www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved March 20 2021 David Askevold www moma org Museum of Modern Art New York Retrieved March 27 2021 Poole Nancy Geddes The Art of London 1830 1980 ir lib uwo ca McIntosh Gallery London Ontario p 210 Retrieved March 29 2021 Cheetham Mark A Jack Chambers Significance amp critical issues www aci iac ca Art Canada Institute Retrieved March 20 2021 Claude Roussel www moncton ca Order of Moncton Retrieved March 30 2021 CARFAC members www carfac ca CARFAC Retrieved March 30 2021 Artist Attends Conference Moncton Transcript October 9 1971 National Gallery of Canada Library and Archives Artist s file Murray 1999 p 177 Murray 1999 p 177ff Harris Michael Artist Ian Wallace Nuovomagazine com Nuvo magazine spring 1913 Retrieved March 20 2021 Murray 1999 p 208 209 Cibola Anne 2022 Arnaud Maggs Life amp Work Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0276 0 Wray John July 26 2012 Janet Cardiff George Bures Miller and the Power of Sound The New York Times Archived from the original on April 3 2015 Retrieved March 20 2021 Mark Lewis Canada ago ca Art Gallery of Ontario Retrieved October 3 2021 Mark Lewis www youtube com OCAD 2020 Retrieved October 3 2021 Lewis Mark Mark Lewis www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved October 22 2021 Steven Shearer capturephotofest com Capture Retrieved July 24 2021 Smith Andy September 14 2019 The Ceramic Figures of Shary Boyle hifructose com Hi Fructose Sept 14 2019 Venice Biennale National Gallery of Canada Archived from the original on October 13 2013 Retrieved May 13 2021 Canada Geoffrey Farmer A Way Out Of The Mirror Venice Biennale 2017 www youtube com National Gallery of Canada Retrieved August 2 2021 Madill Shirley 2022 Kent Monkman Life amp Work Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0280 7 Artist Spotlight artbank ca Canada Council Art Bank Retrieved March 26 2021 Further reading EditAdamson Jeremy 1978 From Ocean to Ocean Nineteenth Century Water Colour Painting in Canada Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario ISBN 9780919876255 Retrieved March 23 2021 Auger Emily Elisabeth 2005 The way of Inuit art aesthetics and history in and beyond the Arctic McFarland ISBN 0 7864 1888 5 Brandon Laura 2021 War Art in Canada A Critical History Toronto Art Canada Institute ISBN 978 1 4871 0271 5 Bryce Alan D 2007 Art smart the intelligent guide to investing in the Canadian art market Dundurn Group ISBN 9781550026764 Bradley Jessica and Lesley Johnstone 1994 Sightlines Reading Contemporary Canadian Art Montreal Artexte Information Centre ISBN 2 9800632 9 0 Crandall Richard C 2000 Inuit art a history McFarland ISBN 0 7864 0711 5 Gerin Annie McLean James S 2009 Public art in Canada critical perspectives University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 9847 4 Harper Russell 1981 Painting in Canada A History 2nd ed Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 6307 1 Jonaitis Aldona 2006 Art of the Northwest coast University of Washington Press ISBN 978 1 55365 210 6 Murray Joan 1999 Canadian Art in the Twentieth Century Toronto Dundurn OCLC 260193722 Retrieved March 17 2021 Murray Joan Harris Lawren 1993 The Best of the Group of Seven McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 0 7710 6674 0 Murray Joan 1972 Ontario Society of Artists 100 Years Toronto Art Gallery of Ontario Nasgaard Roald 2008 Abstract Painting in Canada Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 9781553653943 Retrieved March 23 2021 Nowell Iris 2011 Painters Eleven The Wild Ones of Canadian Art Publishers Group West ISBN 978 1 55365 590 9 Pearse Harold 2006 From drawing to visual culture a history of art education in Canada McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0 7735 3070 3 Robertson Clive 2006 Policy Matters Administrations of Art and Culture YYZ Books ISBN 0 920397 36 0 Reid Dennis 2012 A Concise History of Canadian Painting Third ed Don Mills Ontario Oxford University Press Retrieved June 12 2021 Tippett Maria 2017 Sculpture in Canada Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 978 1 771 62094 9 Retrieved March 18 2021 Tippett Maria 1993 By a Lady Celebrating Three Centuries of Art by Canadian Women Toronto Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 016955 5 Walters Evelyn 2005 The women of Beaver Hall Canadian modernist painters Dundurn Press ISBN 1 55002 588 0 Whitelaw Anne Foss Brian Paikowsky Sandra eds 2010 The Visual Arts in Canada The Twentieth Century Canada Oxford Retrieved March 17 2021 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Art of Canada at Wikimedia Commons Artists in Canada A CHIN Canadian Heritage Information Network Resource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canadian art amp oldid 1144657432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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