Canada and Impressionism: New Horizons SPRING 2021
NATIONAL GALLERY OF CANADA, OTTAWA
CLARENCE GAGNON, OLD HOUSES, BAIE-SAINT-PAUL, C. 1912, PRIVATE COLLECTION, TORONTO
Next spring, experience a fresh perspective on the reception and spread of Impressionism in Canadian art at the National Gallery of Canada.
The exhibition presents 108 works drawn from public and private collections, including 14 from the national collection.
The first of its kind, this exhibition brings together masterworks by Canada’s renowned painters, celebrating and exploring the development of Impressionism in Canadian Art from the last decades of the nineteenth century to the late 1920s.
WHAT DOES CANADIAN IMPRESSIONISM LOOK LIKE?
Visitors can follow in their footsteps to discover the pioneering Canadian artists’ commitment to interpreting foreign and familiar surroundings imbued with an Impressionist vocabulary. “The exhibition explores the multifaceted ways in which two generations of pioneering Canadian artists contributed to the worldwide phenomenon of Impressionism and the advent of modernity in their homeland.”—Katerina Atanassova, Senior Curator of Canadian Art at the National Gallery of Canada By applying stylistic innovations and modernist principles to Canadian subjects, these artists created works that responded to the local environment and to emerging discourse around nationalism in Canadian art. EMILY CARR, AUTUMN IN FRANCE, 1911, NATIONAL GALLERY OF CANADA, OTTAWA
Canadian Impressionists developed an abiding interest in landscape painting during their studies and travels abroad. Back in Canada, artists such as Clarence Gagnon adapted Impressionist techniques to capture the colourful reflections of light on snow and ice. Some Canadian Impressionists spent their careers abroad. Helen McNicoll’s Sunny September (1913) portrays a light and airy scene in England, demonstrating how Canadian Impressionism adapts as it travels. Portraits of women and children demonstrate the Canadian Impressionists’ engagement with the critical and philosophical issues of their day, such as women’s suffrage and the nature of childhood. Visitors can experience the exhibition from the comfort of their homes with the accompanying exhibit catalogue, a one of a kind publication featuring scholarly articles that critically examine the works in the exhibition. It is available in English, French, and German.
Learn more and visit the exhibition online at gallery.ca and find the exhibition catalogue at ShopNGC.ca.
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