The following is an alphabetical list of professional Canadian painters, primarily working in fine art painting and drawing. See other articles for information on Canadian art or a List of Canadian artists for other information.
A
- Isabella Mary Abbott (1890–1955) – artist[1]
- Lily Osman Adams (1865–1945) – painter
- Melita Aitken (1866–1945) – artist[2]
- Aleen Aked (1907–2003) – Canadian-American painter
- Amelia Alcock-White (born 1981)
- David T. Alexander (born 1947) – landscape painter
- Wilhelmina Alexander (1871–1961) – oil painter
- Libby Altwerger (1915–1995) – painter and printmaker
- Helen Andersen (1919–1995) – painter
- Marie-Elmina Anger (1844–1901) – painter
- Silvia Araya (born 1930) – Chilean-born Canadian painter
- Caroline Armington (1875–1939) – painter and printmaker
- Shelagh Armstrong (born 1961) – illustrator[3]
- William Armstrong (1822–1914) – landscape watercolourist[4][5]
- Caven Atkins (1907–2000) – painter[6]
- William Edwin Atkinson (1862–1926) – landscape painter[7]
- Joe Average (born 1957)
- Leo Ayotte (1909–1976) – oil painter[8]
- Philip Aziz (1923–2009) – painter, sculptor[9]
B
- Unity Bainbridge (1916–2017) – artist and poet
- J. M. Barnsley (1861–1929) – painter[10]
- Anne Meredith Barry (1932–2003) – painter
- Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995) – American painter, printmaker and sculptor; raised in Canada[11]
- Robert Bateman (born 1930) – naturalist and painter[12]
- Maxwell Bates (1906–1980) – painter, architect[6]
- Valentina Battler (born 1946) – artist
- Aba Bayefsky (1923–2001) – painter[6]
- Anong Beam – Ojibwe artist and curator
- John William Beatty (1869–1941) – painter[6]
- François Beaucourt (1740–1794) – painter[13]
- Claire Beaulieu (born 1955) – painter[14]
- Noah Becker (born 1970) – painter[6]
- Christi Belcourt (born 1966) – Métis painter
- Arnold Belkin (1930–1992) – Mexican painter; known as "the Canadian Son of Mexican muralism"[15]
- Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith (1846–1923) – watercolour and oil landscape painter[6]
- William Berczy (1744–1813) – pioneer and painter[16][17]
- Rachel Berman (1946–2014) – American-born Canadian painter
- Judith Berry (born 1961) – painter
- George Théodore Berthon (1806–1892) – portrait painter[6]
- André Charles Biéler (1896–1989) – painter and teacher[6]
- David Bierk (1944–2002) – American-born Canadian painter[18]
- Olive Biller (1879–1957) – artist and illustrator
- B.C. Binning (1909–1976) – painter, architect and teacher[6]
- Ron Bloore (1925–2009) – painter, member of the Regina Five[6]
- Bruno Bobak (1923–2012) – Polish-born Canadian painter[19]
- Molly Lamb Bobak (1920–2014) – painter[20]
- Louis Boekhout (1919–2012) – Dutch Canadian landscape painter
- Blanche Bolduc (1906/1907–1998) – Quebec painter, folk artist
- David Bolduc (1945–2010) – abstract painter
- Eleanor Bond (born 1948) – painter, printmaker, and sculptor
- Paul-Émile Borduas (1905–1960) – painter; known for his abstract paintings[21]
- Simone Mary Bouchard (1912–1945) – painter and textile artist
- Sylvie Bouchard (born 1959) – painter
- Eva Theresa Bradshaw (1871–1938) – painter
- Fritz Brandtner (1896–1969) – modernist painter[22]
- Claude Breeze (born 1938) – modern figurative painter[6]
- Henrietta Hancock Britton (1873–1963) – painter
- Bertram Brooker (1888–1955) – writer, painter, musician, and one of the first Canadian abstract artists[23]
- Annora Brown (1899–1987) – painter and graphic artist
- Franklin Brownell (1856–1946) – Impressionist painter, teacher[6]
- William Blair Bruce (1859–1906) – Impressionist painter[6]
- Kittie Bruneau (1929–2021) – painter and printmaker
- William Brymner (1855–1925) – figure and landscape painter[24]
- Dennis Burton (1933–2013) – modernist painter[6]
- Ralph Wallace Burton (1905–1983)[25]
- Jack Bush (1909–1977) – abstract expressionist[26]
- Sheila Butler (born 1940) – painter
C
- Sveva Caetani (1917–1994) – Italian-Canadian painter
- Oscar Cahén (1916–1956) – painter, illustrator, member of Painters Eleven[6]
- Florence Carlyle (1864–1923) – figure and portrait painter
- Franklin Carmichael (1890–1945) – painter; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Emily Carr (1871–1945) – artist and writer; inspired by the indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast[6]
- Barbara Caruso (1937–2009) – colour field painter, illustrator, printmaker, book designer
- A. J. Casson (1898–1992) – painter of landscapes, forests and farms; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Frederick Sproston Challener (1869–1959) – painter, muralist and teacher[6]
- Jack Chambers (1931–1978) – painter and filmmaker[6]
- Benjamin Chee Chee (1944–1977) – Ojibwa painter
- Nan Lawson Cheney (1897–1985) – painter and medical illustrator
- Victor Child (1897–1960) – newspaper illustrator, painter and etcher
- Paraskeva Clark (1898–1986) – painter[6]
- Alberta Cleland (1876–1960) – landscape painter
- Pierre Clerk (born 1928) – painter, sculptor and printmaker
- Nora Collyer (1898–1979) – modernist painter; member of the Beaver Hall Group
- Alex Colville (1920–2013) – painter[6]
- Charles Comfort (1900-1994) – painter, muralist, designer, educator[6]
- Emily Coonan (1885–1971) – post-impressionist painter; member of the Beaver Hall Group
- Sonia Cornwall (1919–2006) – painter
- Bruno Cote (1940–2010) – landscape painter
- Graham Coughtry (1931–1999) – painter[6]
- Holly Coulis (born 1968) – painter
- Rody Kenny Courtice (1891–1973) – painter
- Linda Craddock (born 1952) – painter and photographer
- Sarah Lindley Crease (1826–1922) – watercolour painter
- William Cruikshank (1848–1922) – painter, teacher[6]
- Maurice Cullen (1866–1934) – Impressionist painter[6]
- Greg Curnoe (1937–1992) – painter, co-founder of CAR[6]
- Colleen Cutschall (born 1951) – Oglala-Sicangu Lakota multi-media artist, professor
- Gertrude Spurr Cutts (1858–1941) – landscape painter
D
- Caroline Louisa Daly (1832–1893) – watercolour painter[27]
- Kathleen Daly (1898–1994) – painter[6]
- Ken Danby (1940–2007) – painter
- Charles Daudelin (1920–2001) – sculptor and painter[6]
- Julia Dault (born 1977) – painter
- Forshaw Day (1837–1903) – painter and educator
- Louis de Niverville (1933–2019) – painter[6]
- Simone Dénéchaud (1905–1974) – painter[28]
- Mary Dignam (1860–1938) – painter; pioneer activist for women artists
- Audrey Capel Doray (born 1931) – multimedia artist[29]
- Marie-Denise Douyon (born 1961) – painter and illustrator[30]
- Joseph Drapell (born 1940) – abstract painter
- Moira Dryer (1957–1992) – abstract painter[31]
- Ann Macintosh Duff (1925–2022)[32]
- Edmond Dyonnet (1859–1954) – painter
E
- Wyatt Eaton (1849–1896) – portrait painter[6]
- Allan Edson (1846–1888) – landscape painter[6]
- Harold Elliott (1890–1968) – painter
- Catherine Everett (born 1957) – sculptor and painter
- Peter Maxwell Ewart (1918–2001) – landscape painter
F
- Holly Farrell (born 1961) – painter
- Claire Fauteux (1889–1998) – painter
- Henriette Fauteux-Massé (1924–2005) – painter
- Marcelle Ferron (1924–2001) – painter
- George Fertig (1915–1983) – painter and photographer
- Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald (1890–1956) – artist; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Lita Fontaine (born 1953) – Indigenous multi-media painter
- Dulcie Foo Fat (born 1946) – painter
- Nehemiah Ford (birth year unknown; died between 1858 and 1862) – politician and painter
- Michael Forster (1907–2002) painter[6]
- Marc-Aurèle Fortin (1888–1970) – painter
- Daniel Fowler (1810–1894) watercolour painter[6]
- John Arthur Fraser (1838–1898) painter[6]
G
- Clarence Gagnon (1881–1942) – painter from Quebec, etcher[6]
- Yves Gaucher (1934–2000) – painter, printmaker[6]
- Robert Genn (1936–2014) – painter
- Sky Glabush (born 1970) – painter
- Eric Goldberg (1890–1969) – Jewish-Canadian landscape painter
- Regina Seiden Goldberg (18971–1991) – painter
- Charles Goldhamer (1903–1985) – watercolour painter[6]
- Betty Goodwin (1923–2008) – painter
- Richard Gorman (1935–2010) – painter and printmaker[6]
- Vaughan Grayson (1894–1995) – painter and printmaker from Saskatchewan
- Daniel Charles Grose (1832–1900) – painter
H
- Alexandra Haeseker (born 1945) – painter, printmaker, installation artist
- Sylvia Hahn (1911–2001) – artist
- John Hall (born 1943) – painter
- Joice M. Hall (born 1943) – painter
- Kazuo Hamasaki (1925–2005) – painter; Canadian Japanese watercolour painter noted for combining 16th-century Japanese techniques with Canadian styles
- Mary Riter Hamilton (1873–1954) – painter; female World War I artist, dubbed "Canada's first woman artist"
- John A. Hammond (1843–1939) – painter, photographer and printmaker
- Clara Isabella Harris (1887–1974) – impressionist painter
- Lawren Harris (1855–1970) – painter; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Robert Harris (1848–1919) – painter; noted for his portrait of the Fathers of Confederation[6]
- Ted Harrison (1926–2015) – painter
- Monique Harvey (1950–2001) – painter
- Guenter Heim (1935–2014) – impressionistic landscapes
- Pierre Henry (1932–2013) – painter; creator of the anecdotism art movement
- Carle Hessay (1911–1978) – painter
- Prudence Heward (1896–1947) – painter; member of the Beaver Hall Group[6]
- Edwin Holgate (1892–1977) – artist, painter and engraver; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- William Hope (1863–1931) – painter, war artist, landscapes
- Yvonne McKague Housser (1898–1996) – painter, teacher[6]
- Patrick Howlett (born 1971) – visual artist
- E.J. Hughes (1913–2007) – painter
- Natalka Husar (born 1951) – painter
I
- Jay Isaac (born 1975) – painter
- Gershon Iskowitz (1921–1988) – painter[6]
J
- A. Y. Jackson (1882–1974) – painter; founding member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Otto Reinhold Jacobi (1812–1901) – painter[6]
- Richard Jacobson (born 1959) – artist and illustrator
- Charles William Jefferys (1869–1951) – painter, illustrator, author and teacher; known as a historical illustrator[6]
- Frank Johnston (1888–1949) – artist; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Sarah Anne Johnson (born 1976) – painter
- John Young Johnstone (1887–1930) – Impressionist painter
- Leonel Jules (born 1953) – painter
K
- Paul Kane (1810–1871) – Irish-Canadian painter of First Nations peoples in the Canadian West and the Native Americans in the Oregon Country
- Andrew Kiss (born 1946) – oil painting, landscapes
- Bert Kloezeman (1921–1987) – painter and art educator
- Harold Klunder (born 1943) – Dutch-born Canadian painter
- Dorothy Knowles (1927–2023) – painter
- F. McGillivray Knowles (1860–1932) – painter[6]
- Wanda Koop (born 1951) – painter
- Cornelius Krieghoff (1815–1872) – painter of landscapes and outdoor life[6]
- Maya Kulenovic (born 1975) – painter
- William Kurelek (1927–1977) – artist and writer
L
- Stephen Lack (born 1946) – actor, painter
- Ozias Leduc (1864–1955) – Quebec painter of portraits, still lifes, landscapes and religious works
- Gary Lee-Nova (born 1943) – painter and multimedia artist
- Joseph Légaré (1795–1855) – painter
- Irène Legendre (1904–1992) – painter
- Jean Paul Lemieux (1904–1990) – painter[6]
- Serge Lemoyne (1941–1998) – performance artist and painter
- Rick Leong (born 1973) – painting and drawing
- Rita Letendre (1928–2021) – painter, muralist[6]
- Maud Lewis (1903–1970) – painter
- Robert Henry Lindsay (1868–1938) – painter
- Oleg Lipchenko (born 1957) – painter, graphic artist and illustrator
- Arthur Lismer (1881–1969) – painter; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Judith Lodge (born 1941) – painter, photographer
- Joy Zemel Long (1922–2018) – painter
- John Goodwin Lyman (1886–1967)
M
- J. E. H. MacDonald (1873–1932) – painter; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- Jock Macdonald (1887–1960) – painter; member of the Painters Eleven[6]
- Landon Mackenzie (born 1954) – painter
- Pegi Nicol MacLeod (1904–1949) – painter[6]
- Clifford Maracle (1944–1996) – painter and sculptor
- Agnes Martin (1912–2004) – painter
- Arthur N. Martin (1889–1961) – painter
- Thomas Mower Martin (1838–1934) – landscape painter[6]
- Marmaduke Matthews (1837–1913) – painter[6]
- Henrietta Mabel May (1877–1971) – painter; member of the Beaver Hall Group
- Doris McCarthy (1910–2010) – artist specializing in abstracted landscapes[6]
- Jean McEwen (1923–1999) – abstract painter[6]
- Florence Helena McGillivray (1864–1938) – landscape painter
- Elizabeth McIntosh (born 1967) – abstract painter
- Arthur McKay (1926–2000) – abstract painter[6]
- Isabel McLaughlin (1903–2002) – painter[6]
- Ray Mead (1921–1998) – abstract expressionist; member of Painters Eleven
- John Meredith (1933–2000) – abstract expressionist[6]
- Muriel Millard (1922–2014) – painter[33]
- Kenneth G. Mills (1923–2004) – painter
- David Milne (1882–1953) – painter, printmaker and writer[6]
- Lisa Milroy (born 1959) – painter, especially of everyday items
- Berge Missakian (1933–2017) – painter
- Janet Mitchell (1912–1998) – painter
- Guido Molinari (1933–2004) – abstract painter[6]
- Caroline Monet (born 1985) – painter
- Kent Monkman (born 1965) – First Nations painter
- Ron Moppett (born 1945) – painter
- James Wilson Morrice (1865–1924) – landscape painter[6]
- Kathleen Moir Morris (1893–1986) – painter; member of the Beaver Hall Group
- Norval Morrisseau (1932–2007) – painter
- Louis Muhlstock (1904–2001) – Jewish-Canadian painter[6]
- Kathleen Munn (1887–1974) – painter[6]
- Laura Muntz Lyall (1860–1930) – impressionist painter[6]
N
- Tomori Nagamoto (born 1973) – visual artist
- Kazuo Nakamura (1926–2002) – painter and member of Painters Eleven[6]
- Lilias Torrance Newton (1896–1980) – painter and member of the Beaver Hall Group[6]
- Jack Nichols (1921–2009) – painter[6]
- Guity Novin (born 1944) – Iranian-Canadian figurative painter
O
- Lucius Richard O'Brien (1832–1899) – painter[6]
- Daphne Odjig (1919–2016) – Indigenous painter, activist
- Will Ogilvie (1901–1989) – painter, war artist[6]
- Bobbie Oliver (born 1943) – painter
- Kim Ondaatje (born 1928) – painter, photographer and documentary filmmaker
- Toni Onley (1928–2004) – landscape painter[6]
- Henry Orenstein (1918–2008) – artist specializing in easel paintings, murals and set design
P
- Alfred C. Patstone (1908–1999) – romantic realist oil painter, rural
- Paul Peel (1860–1892) – painter[6]
- Eric Pehap (1912–1981) – abstract artist
- Alfred Pellan (1906–1988) – modern art pioneer, founder of Montreal art group known as Prisme d'yeux, rivals to Les Automatizes[6]
- Sophie Pemberton (1869–1959) – painter
- George Douglas Pepper (1903–1962) – painter[6]
- William Perehudoff (1918–2013) – painter
- Christiane Pflug (1936–1972) – German-born Canadian painter and draughtsperson
- Bev Pike – painter
- Antoine Plamondon (1804–1895) – painter[6]
- Joseph Plaskett (1918–2014) – painter of interiors, still lifes and portraits
- Annie Pootoogook (1969–2016) – painter
- Alicia Popoff (1950–2015) – abstract painter, acrylic and mixed media
- Christopher Pratt (born 1935) – painter and flag designer
- Mary Pratt (1935–2018) – painter specializing in still life paintings
- Jon Pylypchuk (born 1972) – painter and sculptor
R
- Sherry Farrell Racette (born 1952) – Metis mixed media artist
- Gordon Rayner (1935–2010) – abstract expressionist[6]
- George Agnew Reid (1860–1947) – painter[6]
- Mary Hiester Reid (1854–1921) – painter[6]
- Mary Wrinch Reid (1877–1969) – painter[6]
- Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923–2002) – painter and sculptor from Quebec[6]
- Jim Robb (born 1933) – painter from the Yukon
- Goodridge Roberts (1904–1974) – painter of landscapes, still lifes and interiors[6]
- Albert H. Robinson (1881–1956) – painter
- Danièle Rochon (born 1946) – painter from Quebec
- Otto Rogers (1935–2019) – painter
- Trisha Romance (born 1951) – painter in Ontario
- William Ronald (1926–1998) – abstract painter and founder of Painters Eleven[6]
- Cheryl Ruddock – painter
S
- Anne Savage (1896–1971) – painter, art teacher; member of the Beaver Hall Group
- Carl Schaefer (1903–1995) – painter, art teacher[6]
- Charlotte Schreiber (1834–1922) – English-Canadian painter and illustrator
- Jacques Schyrgens (born 1923) – Belgian-Canadian painter of watercolors and illustrator
- Marian Dale Scott (1906–1993) – painter
- Ethel Seath (1879–1963) – painter, art teacher; member of the Beaver Hall Group
- Regina Seiden (1897–1991) – painter
- Ernest Thompson Seton (1860–1946) – painter, naturalist, illustrator[6]
- Jack Shadbolt (1909–1998) – painter, war artist and teacher[6]
- Arnold Shives (born 1943) – painter, multimedia artist, printmaker
- Henrietta Shore (1880–1963) – painter
- Edward Scrope Shrapnel (1845–1920) – painter
- Ron Shuebrook (born 1943) – artist
- Claude A. Simard (1943–2014) – painter of garden scenes, landscapes, still lifes and the human figure
- Paul Sloggett (born 1950) – painter and teacher
- Edith Smith (1867–1954) – painter and teacher
- Freda Pemberton Smith (1902–1991) – painter
- Gordon A. Smith (1919–2020) – painter, printmaker, sculptor, teacher[6]
- Jean Smith (born 1959) – painter, musician, writer
- K. C. Smith (1924–2000) – painter, conservationist
- Michael Snow (born 1929) – painter[6]
- Daniel Solomon (born 1945) – abstract painter and teacher
- David G. Sorensen (1937–2011) – painter
- Paul Soulikias (1926–2023) – painter
- Owen Staples (1866–1949) – painter, etcher, political cartoonist
- Godfrey Stephens (born 1939) – painter, sculptor
- John Edmund Strandberg (1911–1996) – Swedish Canadian landscape painter
- Philip Surrey (1910–1990) – painter[6]
- Marc-Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté (1869–1937) – painter and sculptor[6]
T
- Takao Tanabe (born 1926) – landscape painter
- Daniel Taylor (born 1955) – painter of realistic portraits and wildlife art
- David Thauberger (born 1948) – painter
- Denyse Thomasos (1964–2012) – painter
- Tom Thomson (1877–1917) – painter; mentor to the Group of Seven[6]
- Mildred Valley Thornton (1890–1967) – portrait painter of First Nations elders, landscape painter
- Gideon Tomaschoff (born 1956) – abstract artist
- Gentile Tondino (1923–2001) – artist and educator; taught with Arthur Lismer
- Jacques de Tonnancour (1917–2005) – artist and educator[6]
- Fernand Toupin (1930–2009) – Quebec abstractionist and member of the Plasticiens movement
- Harold Town (1924–1990) – artist and member of Painters Eleven[6]
- Cory Trépanier (born 1968) – landscape painter and filmmaker
U
- Tony Urquhart (1934–2022) – painter and sculptor[6]
V
- Armand Vaillancourt (born 1929) – sculptor and painter
- François Vaillancourt (born 1967) – painter and art director
- Florence Vale (1909–2003) – painter influenced by Surrealism, Cubism, Expressionism
- Frederick Varley (1881–1969) – painter, war artist; member of the Group of Seven[6]
- James Verbicky (born 1973) – mixed media, abstract artist
- Frederick Arthur Verner (1836–1928) – painter of First Nations and buffalo[6]
- Roy Henry Vickers (born 1946) – First Nations painter
W
- Horatio Walker (1858–1938) – oil and watercolor painter[6]
- Ronan Walsh (born 1958) – artist
- Emily Warren (1869–1956) – oil and watercolor painter
- Lowrie Warrener (1900–1983) – abstract painter
- Darrell Wasyk (born 1958) – painter
- Homer Watson (1855–1936) – landscape painter[6]
- Vera Weatherbie (1909–1977) – painter
- Barbara Weaver-Bosson (born 1953) – painter
- Diane Whitehouse (born 1940) – painter
- Joyce Wieland (1930–1998) – filmmaker and painter[6]
- York Wilson (1907–1984) – painter and muralist[6]
- Chloe Wise (born 1990) – painter
- Matthew Wong (1984–2019) – painter[34]
Y
- Walter Yarwood (1917–1996) – abstract painter and member of Painters Eleven[6]
- M. A. Yewdale (1908–2000) – pioneer and heritage artist
- Jinny Yu (born 1976)
Z
- Marguerite Porter Zwicker (1904–1993) – watercolor painter and art promoter
See also
References
- ↑ "Abbott, Isabella Mary (Plummer)". Canadian Women Artists History Initiative.
- ↑ "Aitken, Melita". Canadian Women Artists History Initiative.
- ↑ "Shelagh Armstrong". In.com. Archived from the original on 19 December 2014. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "William Armstrong". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ Tronrud, Thorold J. (1998). "William Armstrong, 1822–1914". Thunder Bay Historical Museum Society. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 Bradfield 1970, p. n.p..
- ↑ "W.E. Atkinson". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
- ↑ "Ayotte, Léo". Galerie Beauchamp. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ Belluz, Julia (21 September 2009). "Artist focused on spiritual themes". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ Barnsley, James M. "Canadian artist (1861–1929)". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
- ↑ "Earl W. Bascom". Bascom Productions. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Bateman, Robert McLellan". Robertbatemen.ca. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "François Beaucourt". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Artists in Canada". Canadian Heritage. Government of Canada. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
- ↑ "Arnold Belkin, Mexican (1930–1992)". RoGallery. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "William Berczy". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ Stagg, Ronald J. (2003). "Berczy, William". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "David Bierk". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Bruno Bobak". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Molly Lamb Bobak". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Paul-Émile Borduas". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Fritz Brandtner". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ Biography of Bertram Brooker, retrieved on May 25th 2007.
- ↑ "William Brymner". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Ralph Burton". Pegasus Gallery of Canadian Art. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Jack Bush". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ↑ "Introducing Caroline Louisa Daly". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
- ↑ Karel, David (1992). Dictionnaire des artistes de langue française en Amérique du Nord: peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs, graveurs, photographes, et orfèvres (in French). Presses Université Laval. p. 229. ISBN 2763772358.
- ↑ Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy G. (eds.) (2013). "Doray, Audrey Capel". North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary, p. 160. Routledge
- ↑ Kozinska, Dorota (8 February 1997). "From Haitian prison, a vision". The Gazette. p. 93. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
- ↑ "Moira Dryer, 34, An Abstract Artist; Painted on Wood". New York Times. 21 May 1992.
- ↑ "Ann Macintosh Duff". National Gallery of Canada. Archived from the original on 15 May 2019. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
- ↑ Thomas, Suzanne; Mcintosh, Andrew (2 December 2014). "Muriel Millard". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
- ↑ Smith, Roberta (24 December 2019). "A Final Rhapsody in Blue From Matthew Wong". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
Bibliography
- Bradfield, Helen (1970). Permanent Collection. Toronto: McGraw Hill. ISBN 0070925046. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
- Burnett, David and Schiff, Marilyn. Contemporary Canadian Art Edmonton, Hurtig Publishers, 1983. ISBN 0-88830-241-X.
- Duval, Paul. Four Decades: The Canadian Group of Painters and their contemporaries – 1930–1970 Toronto, Vancouver, Clarke, Irwin & Company Limited, 1972. ISBN 0-7720-0553-2
- Duval, Paul. High Realism in Canada Toronto, Vancouver, Clarke, Irwin & Company Limited, 1974. ISBN 0-7720-0697-0.
- Fenton, Terry and Wilkin, Karen. Modern Painting In Canada: Major Movements in Twentieth Century Canadian Art Edmonton, Hurtig Publishers, 1978. ISBN 0-88830-162-6.
- Harper, Russell. Painting in Canada: A History 2nd ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1981. ISBN 0-8020-6307-1
- Lord, Barry. The History of Painting in Canada: Toward A People's Art Toronto, New Canada Publications, 1974. ISBN 0-919600-12-3.
- Morris, Jerrold. 100 Years of Canadian Drawings Toronto, Methuen, 1980. ISBN 0-458-94570-6.
- Murray, Joan (1999). Canadian Art in the Twentieth Century. Toronto: Dundurn. OCLC 260193722.
- Nasgaard, Roald (2008). Abstract Painting in Canada. Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 9781553653943. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
- Reid, Dennis A Concise History of Canadian Painting 2nd Edition. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-19-540663-X.
- Whitelaw (ed.), Anne; Foss (ed.), Brian; Paikowsky (ed.), Sandra (2010). The Visual Arts in Canada: The Twentieth Century. Canada: Oxford. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
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