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His affection for French-Canadian life is evident in his anecdotal series of depictions of habitant life, a theme to which he returned throughout his career. From 1909 to 1914 Gagnon moved between Canada, France and Norway, always working up the sketches he had made in Quebec.
- Canadian Art - National Gallery of Canada
The collection of Canadian Art at the National Gallery of...
- Canadian Artists in Dialogue with Impressionism
Demonstrating the disparate ways in which Canadian artists...
- Canadian Art - National Gallery of Canada
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.
Clarence Alphonse Gagnon, R.C.A., (8 November 1881 – 5 January 1942) was a French Canadian painter, draughtsman, engraver and illustrator, from the province of Quebec. He is well known for his landscape paintings of the Laurentians and the Charlevoix region of eastern Quebec.
The French-Canadians express themselves through various forms of art from paintings, printmaking, photography sculpture, mosaic, plastic art to installation arts. Some of the famous painters with French-Canadian descent are Jean-Paul Riopelle, Anne Savage, Guido Molinari and Arthur Villeneuve.
The collection of Canadian Art at the National Gallery of Canada comprises a broad range of work representing artistic practices that date from the early 18th century in New France through to the early 1990s.
5 Οκτ 2006 · Early Canadian art in the European tradition cannot be separated from European artistic production of the same period. From the time they arrived in Canada, French colonists attempted to reproduce an architectural environment that reminded them of their motherland (see also Architecture). Before launching more ambitious projects, they erected a ...
Demonstrating the disparate ways in which Canadian artists engaged with French Impressionism and subsequent art movements – such as Post-Impressionism, Fauvism and Art Nouveau – the exhibition focuses on seven different themes, spanning five decades and a wide variety of art practices.