Embracing Canada: Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven
October 30, 2015 - January 24, 2016
Cornelius Krieghoff
The Royal Mail Crossing the St. Lawrence, 1860
oil on canvas
Private Collection
For over a century the natural world and our relationship to it was a major subject for Canadian artists. Through paintings in the 1800s by Cornelius Krieghoff, Zacharie Vincent and others, Embracing Canada begins with early depictions of Indigenous peoples. European settlers in the Canadian landscape are also depicted by the artists such as Charlotte Schreiber and Homer Watson, who are associated with the founding of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 1880, as well as the artists associated with the expanding Canadian Pacific Railway including Frederick M. Bell-Smith. As the exhibition progresses, artists’ paintings of Canada shift toward the landscape itself rather than human activity within it, as demonstrated by extraordinary works by Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. They and other figures such as Emily Carr, David Milne and Jock Macdonald, who begin to define a unique modern Canadian style.
Drawing on the collections of the Vancouver Art Gallery and a remarkable loan from an important private collection, Embracing Canada surveys the history of artistic engagement with the Canadian landscape from c. 1840 to 1940, a period that produced many outstanding Canadian artists.
Organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and curated by Ian Thom, Senior Curator–Historical
Frederick Verner
Muskoka River, South Branch, 1875
oil on canvas
Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Gift of Dr. Rodrigo Restrepo
Photo: Trevor Mills, Vancouver Art Gallery
Publication
Embracing Canada: Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven
Co-published by the Vancouver Art Gallery and Black Dog Publishing, 2015
This publication combines over 150 works from the Vancouver Art Gallery’s permanent collection and an eminent private collection of Canadian painting to present a comprehensive survey of Canadian landscapes made between the mid-19th and mid- 20th centuries.
Available at the Gallery Store.