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Art and Nature, Canadian Style

Art and nature have long been bedfellows. Stepping outside it’s easy to see why. Taking one step further and escaping into the wilderness unveils a veritable buffet of inspiration to feed off of. If you can honestly capture even a fraction of the essence of what’s right in front of you, often that’s enough to make a great artwork.

Trees In The North by Lawren Harris

As a setting for creating art, nature has not gone unnoticed by many great artists who have chosen to live and create within it. Inspiration comes both from nature’s peaceful and tranquil emotions – such as the calm of the water on the lake before dawn – as well as it its raw intensity such as in bouts of merciless weather or the powerful, dynamic interaction of animals.

The Little Falls by J. E. H. MacDonald

Many artists have become transfixed with nature, making it the main focus of their careers. A Canadian group of landscape painters called The Group of Seven were one such cohort. Otherwise known as the Algonquin School, they painted throughout the 1920’s and into the early 1930’s. Primarily painting the Canadian landscape, these artists left us with iconic images of one of Canada’s greatest assets – the land itself.

Fred Varley - Stormy Weather Georgian Bay

Mirror Lake by Franklin Carmichael

Berry Patch, 1920 by Frank Johnston

Brink Of Falls Moon River,1930 by Arthur Lismer

Maple And Birches by A.Y. Jackson

In 2010, ‘’Bylot Island I’’, an oil-on-canvas by Group of Seven Artist Lawren Harris sold for $ 2,808,000. It was the second Harris piece to sell for over $1 million at that auction, and one of the most expensive works ever sold by a Canadian artist.

"Bylot Island I," by Canadian artist Lawren Harris

 

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Comments (1)

  1. Mary Wehner
    September 15, 2012 at 12:25 pm

    The best nature art in my opinion this group should be known by all artists and art lovers. Combination of abstract expression and emotional reality.

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