List of Canadian painters
Appearance
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)
- Wilhelmina Alexander (1871–1961) – oil painter
- David T. Alexander (born 1947) – landscape painter
- Libby Altwerger (1915–1995) – painter and printmaker
- Helen Andersen (1919–1995) – painter
- Marie-Elmina Anger (1844–1901) – painter
- Caroline Armington (1875–1939) – painter and printmaker
- Shelagh Armstrong (born 1961) – illustrator[3]
- William Armstrong (1822–1914) – landscape watercolourist[4][5]
- Silvia Araya (born 1930) – Chilean-born Canadian painter
- 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
- Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995) – American painter, printmaker and sculptor; raised in Canada[10]
- J. M. Barnsley (1861–1929) – painter[11]
- Anne Meredith Barry (1932–2003) – painter
- 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
- Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith (1846–1923) – watercolour and oil landscape painter[6]
- Arnold Belkin (1930–1992) – Mexican painter; known as "the Canadian Son of Mexican muralism"[15]
- 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]
- David Bierk (1944–2002) – American-born Canadian painter[18]
- André Charles Biéler (1896–1989) – painter and teacher[6]
- 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]
- Sylvie Bouchard (born 1959) – painter
- Molly Lamb Bobak (1920–2014) – painter[20]
- Blanche Bolduc (1906/1907–1998) – folk artist
- Eleanor Bond (born 1948) – painter, printmaker, and sculptor
- Louis Boekhout (1919–2012) – Dutch Canadian landscape painter
- Blanche Bolduc (1906/1907–1999) – Quebec painter
- David Bolduc (1945–2010) – abstract painter
- Paul-Émile Borduas (1905–1960) – painter; known for his abstract paintings[21]
- Simone Mary Bouchard (1912–1945) – painter and textile artist
- 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
- Linda Craddock (born 1952) – painter and photographer
- Sarah Lindley Crease (1826–1922) – watercolour painter
- Rody Kenny Courtice (1891–1973) – painter
- William Cruikshank (painter) (1848–1922) – painter, teacher[6]
- Maurice Cullen (1866–1934) – Impressionist painter[6]
- Greg Curnoe (1937–1992) – painter, co-founder of CAR[6]
- 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 (artist) (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 (19231–2008) – 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
- 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
- Sylvia Hahn (1911–2001) – artist
- 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
- Laura Muntz Lyall (1860–1930) – impressionist painter[6]
- 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
- Clifford Maracle (1944–1996) – painter and sculptor
- Agnes Martin (1912–2004) – painter
- Arthur N. Martin (1889–1961) – painter
- 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]
- Landon Mackenzie (born 1954) – painter
- Isabel McLaughlin (1903–2002) – painter[6]
- Pegi Nicol MacLeod (1904–1949) – painter[6]
- Thomas Mower Martin (1838–1934) – landscape painter[6]
- Marmaduke Matthews (1837–1913) – 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, see Laura Muntz Lyall (1860–1930)
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
- Otto Rogers (1935–2019) painter
- Danièle Rochon (born 1946) – painter from Quebec
- 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 (artist) (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
- 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 and 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 and teacher[6]
- 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
- 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
- Denyse Thomasos (1964 - 2012) - painter
- 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
- Piet Van Loon (1945-2000) Landscape & Portrait Painter, print maker, graphic artist, influenced by group of 7. Died Ft. McPherson NT
- 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) – oils and watercolor painter[6]
- Ronan Walsh (born 1958) – artist
- Emily Warren (1869–1956) – oils and watercolors 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 (boen 1953) - painter
- Diane Whitehouse (born 1940) - painter
- Joyce Wieland (1930–1998) – filmmaker and painter[6]
- Chloe Wise (born 1990) - painter
- York Wilson (1907–1984) – painter and muralist[6]
- 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) – watercolors painter and art promoter
See also
- Beaver Hall Group
- Canadian Art Club
- Group of Seven
- Indian Group of Seven
- List of Canadian artists
- Painters Eleven
- Regina Five
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.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db 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.
- ^ "Earl W. Bascom". Bascom Productions. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
- ^ Barnsley, James M. "Canadian artist (1861–1929)". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
- ^ "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.
{{cite book}}
:|last1=
has generic name (help)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Painters from Canada.