Canadian illustration, family ties and national identity are all at the heart of the Ottawa Art Gallery’s new exhibit
This year will mark the 100th anniversary of the Group of Seven’s first exhibition. John Geddes revisits the group’s work in a bid to see their art as art, rather than ‘the over-familiar illustrations of a nation-building saga.’
After residential school, he vowed to go back to his traditional ways. As an artist, his work became known across Europe.
The most inventive and exciting Canadian project at the art show in years
The first restoration of ‘A Meeting of the School Trustees’ in a century has revealed a much brighter painting with a new, more hopeful meaning
Black-and-white street snaps and full-colour studio confections capture photographic fidelity in a National Gallery of Canada retrospective
Canadian art has its lovers and its haters, but it needs a new funding model—and more Canadian eyes on it
A new exhibit exposes our squeamishness about nakedness in art
Twenty-one writers celebrate 21 objects from the Royal Ontario Museum collection
A conversation with Charles Hill and his exhibit looking at Canadian art from 1890 to 1918, an ‘era of optimism’
An unprecedented show puts Dorland’s work alongside the Group of Seven paintings that inspire him
It’s primate art and Pockets Warhol is an international star