In the early 20th Century, Canadian were more aware of their own identity. A group of landscape painters called themselves, the Group of Seven aimed to develop their distinctive Canadian style of painting. Most of the artists worked in commercial illustrations. Amongst them were Franklin Varley, Lawren Harris, A Y Jackson, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J E H MacDonald and Franklin Carmichael. It was the Canadian answer to the French Impressionists with equally colourful styles. There prominent subjects matters of their paintings were the lone pine, the snow and the Canadian wilderness.
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Canadian Winter - 20C Canadian Paintings
1. 14.12.2016 Version 1.0 - 12 Jan 2017. Jerry Daperro. London.
Canadian Winter
All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective owners.
Available free for non-commercial, Educational and personal use.
20C Canadian Paintings
Noontime, Longue Pointe Village (Detail). 1919. Oil on canvas, 76.7x101.8 cm. Albert Robinson. Musee du Quebec.
2. In the early 20th
Century, Canadian were more aware of their own identity. A group of landscape painters called
themselves, the Group of Seven aimed to develop their distinctive Canadian style of painting. Most of the artists
worked in commercial illustrations. Amongst them were Franklin Varley, Lawren Harris, A Y Jackson, Frank
Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J E H MacDonald and Franklin Carmichael. It was the Canadian answer to the French
Impressionists. There prominent subjects matters of their paintings were the lone pine, the snow and the
Canadian wilderness.
3. There were others who were outside of this group amongst them were Tom Tomson, Emily Carr, Clarence Gagnon etc.
TomThomson
5. ClarenceGagnon
Gagnon was a French Canadian landscape painter. On and off he lived in France and assimilated the Impressionist style.
6. MauriceCullen
Maurice Cullen also painted scenes of Quebec. He studies in France for several years and his light-filled snowscapes in
particular attracted considerable attention, among the Canadian artists..
7. It was said that this painting of JEH MacDonald was inspired after seeing the Scandinavian devotion to northern subject,
after a visit to an exhibition of contemporary Scandinavian landscape painting.
LEH MacDonald
8. Lawren Harris
The Canadian wilderness was a very popular subject for paintings, reflecting the Canadian-ness of their country. .
13. TomThomson
Tom Thomson was the most famous artist of Canada and his life become a Canadian legend, often associated with the
Canadian wilderness.
14. Clarence Gagnon reflected the French Canadian ways of life, battling with harsh environment.
ClarenceGagnon
15. ClarenceGagnon
Clarence Gagnon is best known today for the illustrations he created for Maria Capdelaine, a famous novel on the French
Canadian ways of life in Quebec.
16. ClarenceGagnon
Clarence Gagnon wrote on his Capdelaine illustrations were to capture “the struggle of a brave little minority and reveals the
true .pioneering instinct of these early settlers.”
19. ClarenceGagnon
Clarence Gagnon grew up in late 19C rural Quebec. Rarely has an artist fused innate understanding with such acute
powers of observation.
20. ClarenceGagnon
In 1909, Clarence Gagnon, Charlevoix county, Quebec capturing the untouched quality of remote towns buried under heavy
dazzling snow, with white hillside of a Canadian winter.
23. Lawren Harris painted a series of portraits of houses
in Toronto around the University Avenue and
College Street, where much of Toronto’s immigrant
population lived.
He liked the effects of the bright winter sunlight as it
played on the facades of the houses, with their lively
red trim and green shutters. For Harris, this was a
distinctly Canadian scene, warm and cheerful
despite the cold ground of snow and the ic-blue sky.
Lawren Harris
28. AJCasson
AJ Casson is known for his depiction of the
gentler, more civilized area of southern
Ontario, areas of small villages and farms, the
forests and rolling hills of “cottage country” ,
rather than the wild Canada.
30. EdwinHolgate
Edwin Holgate was a Montreal artist. Heis reputation was largely founded on his fine portraiture and interpretation of the
human figure.
39. LawrenHarris
Lawren Harris began to abandoned landscape painting and began his series of ‘ice cone mountains’ in search for a
‘deeper and more universal expression”.
41. ArthurLismer
Arthur Lismer was born and raised in Sheffield England. He spent some time in continental Europe. He saw Canada
through the eyes of the French impressionists, using small dabs of pure colour..
42. AYJackson
Jackson was widely travelled in Canada. His painted the Rocky Mountains, the Arctic, Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes.
45. All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective
owners. Available free for non-commercial and personal
use.
The End
Music – Hallelujah played by Chris Botii
The Canadian wilderness. Aurora at Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. Canada.
In the early 20th Century, Canadian were more aware of their own identity. A group of landscape painters called themselves, the Group of Seven aimed to develop their distinctive Canadian style of painting. Most of the artists worked in commercial illustrations. Amongst them were Franklin Varley, Lawren Harris, A Y Jackson, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, J E H MacDonald and Franklin Carmichael. It was the Canadian answer to the French Impressionists with equally colourful styles. There prominent subjects matters of their paintings were the lone pine, the snow and the Canadian wilderness.