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    VideoArt Fraud & The Group of Seven

    Jon S. Dellandrea, author and Chair Emeritus of the Art Canada Institute Board of Directors, discusses his new book, The Great Canadian Art Fraud Case.

    2026 Canadian Art Inspiration Student Challenge - Promo
    Video2026 Canadian Art Inspiration Student Challenge - Promo
    VideoShary Boyle and Rajni Perera on Art and Change-Making

    Boyle and Perera reflect on their experiences of navigating cultural distinctions within their collaborative relationships with institutions and other artists.

    VideoArt Talk: The Book on Kent Monkman

    Monkman addresses how the ACI’s publication Revision and Resistance is the only book to offer the behind-the-scenes story of mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People), two genre-defying paintings that have changed the conversation about art history.

    VideoMaud Lewis: A Folk Art Icon

    When it comes to folk art in Canada, there’s before Maud Lewis (1901–1970)—and after. Celebrating the release of Maud Lewis: Life & Work by Ray Cronin, the panelists will discuss her legacy and pay tribute to the cheerful works that testify to her indomitable spirit.

    VideoWalter S. Allward: Vimy & the Meaning of the Monument

    Today many public monuments are controversial, but in the early twentieth century they were objects to behold—none more so than Canada’s Vimy Memorial in France, a destination for over 700,000 visitors each year. This talk will address the iconic structure, its construction, and the role of commemorative statues in art history.

    VideoHelen McNicoll: Bringing Impressionism to Canada

    This interview will reveal when and why Audain began buying art and how he became one of Canadian art’s most devoted patrons and instrumental in preserving and promoting our country’s cultural heritage.

    VideoMichael Audain: Collecting Art in Canada

    This interview will reveal when and why Audain began buying art and how he became one of Canadian art’s most devoted patrons and instrumental in preserving and promoting our country’s cultural heritage.

    VideoRobert Houle: Rebel and Iconoclast

    In this talk the Saulteaux artist and curator speaks about how, through his art, he has created a renewed vision of the world that includes the restoration of cultural memory, challenges to the government on political issues affecting Indigenous peoples, and the decolonization of the museum and the self.

    VideoDiscovering Oscar Cahén: The Warrior

    Over two years in the making, this documentary by Howard Brull presents insightful and relevant observations on the life and career of Oscar Cahén. Through this new documentary, Cahén’s work is succinctly presented to a new generation of audiences, along with his pivotal painting, “The Warrior” (1956), one of Cahén’s most remarkable pieces.

    VideoArt Fraud & The Group of Seven

    Jon S. Dellandrea, author and Chair Emeritus of the Art Canada Institute Board of Directors, discusses his new book, The Great Canadian Art Fraud Case.

    Robert Houle: Rebel and Iconoclast
    VideoRobert Houle: Rebel and Iconoclast

    In this talk the Saulteaux artist and curator speaks about how, through his art, he has created a renewed vision of the world that includes the restoration of cultural memory, challenges to the government on political issues affecting Indigenous peoples, and the decolonization of the museum and the self.

    VideoKent Monkman: The Making of a Masterpiece

    For the first time in a live interview the artist will reveal how he used the techniques of a modern atelier to create monumental paintings that boldly address North America's legacy of colonialism while referencing, subverting, and critiquing Western art history.

    Michael Audain: Collecting Art in Canada
    VideoMichael Audain: Collecting Art in Canada

    This interview will reveal when and why Audain began buying art and how he became one of Canadian art’s most devoted patrons and instrumental in preserving and promoting our country’s cultural heritage.

    Helen McNicoll: Bringing Impressionism to Canada
    VideoHelen McNicoll: Bringing Impressionism to Canada

    This talk will reveal how McNicoll, although deaf from childhood, garnered international recognition for her luminous rural landscapes, intimate scenes of children, and portraits of modern women, before her premature death at 35 years of age—and why her painting is more relevant today than ever.

    VideoWar Art in Canada

    Throughout Canadian history, conflict has been a catalyst of change and a transformative force in the country’s art history. Celebrate the launch of the Art Canada Institute’s groundbreaking new online art book War Art in Canada: A Critical History by the renowned scholar and curator Laura Brandon. The event will feature some of Canada’s leading war artists. As well, it will include a Q & A between Brandon and Sara Angel, ACI’s Executive Director, who will discuss the impact of conflict on creativity as well as the role that war art plays in shaping the national imagination and identity.

    Walter Allward: Vimy & the Meaning of the Monument
    VideoWalter Allward: Vimy & the Meaning of the Monument

    Today many public monuments are controversial, but in the early twentieth century they were objects to behold—none more so than Canada’s Vimy Memorial in France, a destination for over 700,000 visitors each year. This talk will address the iconic structure, its construction, and the role of commemorative statues in art history.

    Maud Lewis: A Folk Art Icon
    VideoMaud Lewis: A Folk Art Icon

    When it comes to folk art in Canada, there’s before Maud Lewis (1901–1970)—and after. Celebrating the release of Maud Lewis: Life & Work by Ray Cronin, the panelists will discuss her legacy and pay tribute to the cheerful works that testify to her indomitable spirit.

    VideoKazuo Nakamura & the Japanese Diaspora in Canada

    Painters Eleven co-founder Kazuo Nakamura (1926–2002) was one of the great Canadian artists of the twentieth century, famed for his muted landscapes and abstract compositions that blended Western and Eastern influences. As a Japanese Canadian whose family had been interned in British Columbia during the Second World War and later forced to relocate to Toronto, Nakamura struggled with his identity and sense of place. In the post-war years, he resumed his art education, and found himself equally inspired by mathematics, science, and philosophy. In this talk, the panelists will discuss Nakamura’s life and his artistic achievements and how they reflect the pivotal diversification of Canadian art in the twentieth century.

    The Launch of the Art Canada Institute
    VideoThe Launch of the Art Canada Institute

    Founder and Executive Director Sara Angel talks to CBC News about the launch of the Art Canada Institute on November 28, 2013. Her vision was simple: make Canadian art history accessible to twenty-first century audiences by creating a multi-vocal, bilingual, comprehensive web resource on the country’s visual culture.

    VideoAgnes Martin & Her Glenn Gould Connection

    Although Agnes Martin (1912–2004) spent the majority of her career in the United States, her Canadian roots were deep, from her childhood in Saskatchewan, Alberta, and Vancouver, to her trips back home as a mature artist. This connection is exemplified by Gabriel, her video work that draws on pianist Glenn Gould’s famous recording of the Goldberg Variations. The panelists will also discuss how Martin gained renown in the male-dominated art world of the 1950s and 1960s, and how she became a leading figure of Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism, the era’s two dominant movements.

    VideoSuzy Lake: Canadian Art & Activism

    For Suzy Lake (b.1947), life and art have been inextricably linked with activism. Born in Detroit, she became involved with the anti-war and civil rights movements of the late 1960s, and she immigrated to Canada in protest of the Vietnam War. In Montreal, Lake focused on creating socially and politically charged works. Incorporating elements of theatre, performance, and role-play, Lake blended technology and art to create compelling works of extraordinary activist commentary. Today she is recognized as one of the world’s most important photo-based practitioners. In this talk artist Suzy Lake discusses her profound practice and esteemed career with Erin Silver, author of Suzy Lake: Life & Work, and Sara Angel, Founder and Executive Director of the Art Canada Institute.

    VideoIljuwas Bill Reid: Haida Artist & Catalyst of Change

    Few twentieth-century artists were catalysts for the reclamation of a culture. Iljuwas Bill Reid (1920–1998) was among them. Born into a mixed-race family in Victoria, B.C., and denied his mother’s Haida heritage in his youth, Reid would go on to become one of the most significant Northwest Coast artists of our time. Throughout his fifty-year-long career he was prolific as a maker and thinker, creating more than one thousand original works and writing dozens of texts that gave voice to his vision and the cultural issues of his day. He is remembered as a passionate artist and an adamant community activist, mentor, and writer. In this talk Gerald McMaster and Sara Angel will address Reid’s enduring legacy as a complex figure of power, resilience, and strength.

    The Book on Kent Monkman: the internationally renowned artist in conversation with Sara Angel
    VideoThe Book on Kent Monkman: the internationally renowned artist in conversation with Sara Angel

    Monkman addresses how the ACI’s publication "Revision and Resistance" is the only book to offer the behind-the-scenes story of "mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People)", two genre-defying paintings that have changed the conversation about art history.

    Power Shifts: Shary Boyle and Rajni Perera on Art and Change-Making
    VideoPower Shifts: Shary Boyle and Rajni Perera on Art and Change-Making

    Boyle and Perera reflect on their experiences of navigating cultural distinctions within their collaborative relationships with institutions and other artists.

    Artist Bio: Oviloo Tunnillie
    VideoArtist Bio: Oviloo Tunnillie

    “Few artists have been able to accomplish the abstraction of pure emotion through cold, hard stone as Oviloo Tunnillie. In fact viewers may wonder if they are seeing work by an Inuit artist, as Oviloo’s sculpture crosses cultural lines.” Darlene Coward Wight

    Artist Bio: Bertram Brooker
    VideoArtist Bio: Bertram Brooker

    “A self-taught polymath, Brooker was one of Canada’s first abstract artists. His relentless exploration of new ways of seeing situates him among this country’s most accomplished early modernist painters.” James King

    Artist Bio: Emily Carr
    VideoArtist Bio: Emily Carr

    “Emily Carr is one of Canada’s best-known artists. Her life and work reflect a profound commitment to the land and peoples she knew and loved. Her sensitive evocations reveal an artist grappling with the spiritual questions that the Canadian landscape and culture inspired in her.” Lisa Baldissera

    Artist Bio: Homer Watson
    VideoArtist Bio: Homer Watson

    “Homer Watson’s landscapes were biographical manifestos and philosophical statements, an opportunity to explore nature’s inner life, power, and meaning and to probe the delicate relationship of respect that he believed human beings should establish with the natural world.” Brian Foss

    Artist Bio: William Notman
    VideoArtist Bio: William Notman

    “Notman’s photographs still resonate as vivid works of art beyond simply documentation, and they serve as a rich starting point for exploring the complexity of nineteenth-century life in Canada.” Sarah Parsons

    Artist Bio: Gershon Iskowitz
    VideoArtist Bio: Gershon Iskowitz

    “The circumstances of Gershon Iskowitz’s early life—the trauma of the Holocaust and the uncertainty of the immediate postwar period, followed by immigration to Canada—provide the context within which we must try to understand and appreciate his work.” Ihor Holubizky

    Is This Art Canadian? Brian Foss on Homer Watson
    VideoIs This Art Canadian? Brian Foss on Homer Watson

    ACI author Brian Foss discusses how Homer Watson, in the nineteenth century, first portrayed the surrounding landscape as specifically Canadian, rather than as a pastiche of European influences.

    Is This Art Canadian? Sarah Milroy on Emily Carr
    VideoIs This Art Canadian? Sarah Milroy on Emily Carr

    Chief curator of the McMichael Canadian Art Collection Sarah Milroy discusses how Emily Carr was one of the first artists of national significance to emerge from the West Coast.

    Is This Art Canadian? James King on Bertram Brooker
    VideoIs This Art Canadian? James King on Bertram Brooker

    ACI author James King discusses how despite Bertram Brooker’s lack of formal art training, he painted in a wide variety of styles, creating cutting-edge modernist works and becoming one of Canada’s first abstract artists.

    Is This Art Canadian? Sarah Parsons on William Notman
    VideoIs This Art Canadian? Sarah Parsons on William Notman

    ACI author Sarah Parsons discusses how William Notman arrived in Canada from Scotland in 1856 and swiftly established himself as Montreal’s most prominent photographer.

    Artist Bio: Molly Lamb Bobak
    VideoArtist Bio: Molly Lamb Bobak

    “Molly Lamb Bobak’s career as a professional artist began as Canada’s first official woman war artist. She remains best known for the paintings she produced once the hostilities ended in Europe and for the humorous, satirical drawings she included in her wartime diary.” Michelle Gewurtz

    Artist Bio: Kathleen Munn
    VideoArtist Bio: Kathleen Munn

    “Munn will always be a mystery—and this makes her all the more irresistible.” Georgiana Uhlyarik

    Artist Bio: Paterson Ewen
    VideoArtist Bio: Paterson Ewen

    “Paterson Ewen was unmistakably original. His work bridged figurative and abstract, fused painting and sculpture to create a whole new medium, and broadened the definition of Canadian landscape, revitalizing national interest in this art.” John G. Hatch

    Artist Bio: Robert Houle
    VideoArtist Bio: Robert Houle

    “Houle reconciles and synthesizes contemporary art trends and Indigenous traditions, encouraging a renewed vision of the world that regains the missing caverns of First Nations cultural memory.” Shirley Madill

    Art Talk: John G. Hatch on rebel and iconoclast Paterson Ewen
    VideoArt Talk: John G. Hatch on rebel and iconoclast Paterson Ewen

    John G. Hatch discusses the life and work of Canadian artist Paterson Ewen. Best known for his gouged, painted plywood surfaces, Ewen’s work spoke to the psychological challenges he struggled with throughout his life.

    Art Talk: Andrew Kear on rebel and iconoclast William Kurelek
    VideoArt Talk: Andrew Kear on rebel and iconoclast William Kurelek

    Andrew Kear explores the life and work of Prairie artist, William Kurelek, whose meticulously crafted paintings often explore his Roman Catholic religion and Ukrainian-Canadian cultural roots.

    Art Talk: Georgiana Uhlyarik on rebel and iconoclast Kathleen Munn
    VideoArt Talk: Georgiana Uhlyarik on rebel and iconoclast Kathleen Munn

    Kathleen Munn was a pioneer of modern art in Canada. Georgiana Uhlyarik, Fredrik S. Eaton curator, Canadian Art, at the Art Gallery of Ontario, discusses Munn’s bold use of colour and advanced abstracts.

    Art Talk: Shirley Madill on the rebel and iconoclast Robert Houle
    VideoArt Talk: Shirley Madill on the rebel and iconoclast Robert Houle

    Shirley Madill discusses the life and work of Sandy Bay First Nation / Kaa-wii-kwe-tawang-kak artist Robert Houle, whose work has opened critical discussion on the political and cultural issues surrounding Indigenous peoples in Canada.

    William Kurelek: The Artist and the Av Isaacs Scene
    VideoWilliam Kurelek: The Artist and the Av Isaacs Scene

    ACI author Andrew Kear explores how in 1959, William Kurelek met Toronto’s art dealer Av Isaacs, who would launch his career.

    Artist Bio: William Kurelek
    VideoArtist Bio: William Kurelek

    “William Kurelek was an artist of extremes. As no Canadian artist before him or since, Kurelek attracted, through his at once sentimental and monstrous imagery, the attention of both popular audiences and seasoned critics.” Andrew Kear

    Artist Bio: Helen McNicoll
    VideoArtist Bio: Helen McNicoll

    “McNicoll maintained a strong attachment to the fundamental principles of ‘pure’ Impressionism and pushed the style further than any other Canadian artist.” Samantha Burton

    What Makes Art Canadian? Samantha Burton on Helen McNicoll
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Samantha Burton on Helen McNicoll

    ACI author Samantha Burton discusses how Helen McNicoll’s impressionist paintings redefined Canadian art.

    Artist Bio: Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald
    VideoArtist Bio: Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald

    “FitzGerald helped to foster the notion of Western Canada as a beautiful and inviting place. The landscape was not only a locale with economic benefits but also one dominated by nature’s glorious majesty of open sky and a sense of freedom.” Michael Parke-Taylor

    What Makes Art Canadian? Michael Parke-Taylor on Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Michael Parke-Taylor on Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald

    ACI author Michael Parke-Taylor discusses how Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald captured the essence of the Canadian prairie in his art.

    What Makes Art Canadian? Ray Cronin on Alex Colville
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Ray Cronin on Alex Colville

    ACI author Ray Cronin discusses how Alex Colville painted some of the most iconic images ever created in this country.

    Artist Bio: Alex Colville
    VideoArtist Bio: Alex Colville

    “Even as Colville concentrated on creating images drawn from his specific surroundings and experience, he was able to evoke a universal language of myth and metaphor that reverberates throughout our culture.” Ray Cronin

    Artist Bio: Norval Morrisseau
    VideoArtist Bio: Norval Morrisseau

    “When Norval Morrisseau arrived on the Canadian art scene in 1962...few Indigenous people made art that was viewed as contemporary within the narrow framework accepted in mainstream cultural circles.” Carmen Robertson

    What Makes Art Canadian? Judith Rodger on Greg Curnoe
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Judith Rodger on Greg Curnoe

    ACI author Judith Rodger discusses how Greg Curnoe’s regionalist approach to his art makes his work essentially Canadian.

    Artist Bio: Greg Curnoe
    VideoArtist Bio: Greg Curnoe

    Enamored of his hometown, Curnoe helped spearhead London Regionalism. His brightly coloured compositions and text-based elements celebrate both Canada and his anti-establishment views.

    Artist Bio: Jock Macdonald
    VideoArtist Bio: Jock Macdonald

    A trailblazer in Canadian art, Macdonald’s spiritual identification with nature and his unique marriage of graphic design and painting led to a singular style of abstraction.

    Artist Bio: Paraskeva Clark
    VideoArtist Bio: Paraskeva Clark

    Paraskeva Clark persevered as an artist, despite the difficult conditions of her upbringing, creating profoundly provocative political critiques through simple yet powerful imagery.

    What Makes Art Canadian? Joyce Zemans on Jock Macdonald
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Joyce Zemans on Jock Macdonald

    ACI author Joyce Zemans discusses how Jock Macdonald’s innovations in abstraction make him a Canadian art pioneer.

    What Makes Art Canadian? Nancy Campbell on Shuvinai Ashoona
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Nancy Campbell on Shuvinai Ashoona

    ACI author Nancy Campbell discusses how Shuvinai Ashoona’s work reflects dramatic changes in the North and overturns stereotypical notions of Inuit art.

    What Makes Art Canadian? Sarah E.K. Smith on General Idea
    VideoWhat Makes Art Canadian? Sarah E.K. Smith on General Idea

    ACI author Sarah E.K. Smith discusses how General Idea’s œuvre pushed boundaries and addressed key social issues, including the AIDS crisis.

    Artist Bio: Shuvinai Ashoona
    VideoArtist Bio: Shuvinai Ashoona

    Characterized by fantastical creatures and dream-like landscapes, Shuvinai’s works represent not only her own deeply personal interpretation of the natural world, but also a global social community.

    Artist Bio: General Idea
    VideoArtist Bio: General Idea

    Provocative, controversial, and visionary, General Idea (1969–1994) created a platform for social change through the group’s inventive performances, installations, paintings, sculptures, and photography—and its legendary AIDS campaign.

    Art Talk: Oscar Cahén’s Twin Talents
    VideoArt Talk: Oscar Cahén’s Twin Talents

    Jaleen Grove and Maclean’s managing editor Dianna Symonds discuss the life and work of one of the founders of Painters Eleven, Oscar Cahén. Follow his escape from Nazi Germany to his career as a successful commercial illustrator and leader of the Canadian abstract art movement.

    Art Talk: Christine Lalonde on Pitseolak Ashoona
    VideoArt Talk: Christine Lalonde on Pitseolak Ashoona

    Christine Lalonde talks about the life and work of Pitseolak Ashoona, one of the first Inuit artists to produce drawings in the early 1960s. Find out how her thousands of depictions of traditional daily life and legends inspired generations of Inuit artists in her wake.

    Art Talk: Roald Nasgaard on Yves Gaucher
    VideoArt Talk: Roald Nasgaard on Yves Gaucher

    Yves Gaucher was a leading member of Quebec’s Plasticien movement. Author Roald Nasgaard discusses Gaucher’s highly ordered geometrical images that pushed the boundaries of Canadian painting to question the experience of colour.

    Art Talk: Sarah Milroy and Gerta Moray on Emily Carr
    VideoArt Talk: Sarah Milroy and Gerta Moray on Emily Carr

    Gerta Moray and Sarah Milroy discuss the life and work of Emily Carr. Best known for her bold and vibrant images of British Columbia’s Northwest Coast, Carr was also an innovative painter, fusing of wide-range of stylistic influences.

    Art Talk: Arlene Gehmacher on Paul Kane
    VideoArt Talk: Arlene Gehmacher on Paul Kane

    Travelling under the auspices of the Hudson’s Bay Company, Kane (1810–1871) documented Canada’s western landscape and its indigenous peoples in a body of drawings and paintings that today are regarded as one of North America’s most significant ethnographic records and artistic expressions.

    Art Talk: Johanne Sloan on Joyce Wieland
    VideoArt Talk: Johanne Sloan on Joyce Wieland

    Johanne Sloane introduces us to Canadian artist Joyce Wieland: filmmaker, painter, and multimedia artist. Learn more about the role feminism, nationalism, and environmentalism played in her startlingly original art.

    Art Talk: Gerta Moray on Harold Town (Part 2)
    VideoArt Talk: Gerta Moray on Harold Town (Part 2)

    Gerta Moray explores the life and work of Painters Eleven co-founder, Harold Town. A painter, printmaker, and collage artist, he was provocative, prolific, and a technical virtuoso in the Canadian art scene.

    Art Talk: Gerta Moray on Harold Town (Part 1)
    VideoArt Talk: Gerta Moray on Harold Town (Part 1)

    Gerta Moray discusses the life and work of Painters Eleven co-founder, Harold Town. A painter, printmaker, and collage artist, Town was provocative, prolific, and a technical virtuoso. Learn more about his contributions to the Canadian Abstract Expressionist movement.

    Art Talk: Sarah Parsons on William Notman
    VideoArt Talk: Sarah Parsons on William Notman

    Sarah Parsons reveals the life and work of Canadian photographer William Notman. Learn more about his rise to international acclaim and how he changed the way the camera was perceived in the late nineteenth century.

    Art Talk: Martha Langford on Michael Snow
    VideoArt Talk: Martha Langford on Michael Snow

    Martha Langford looks at the life and work of Canadian artist Michael Snow. A leading figure in the new media and Conceptual art movements in Canada, Snow sought to intensify the spectator’s involvement with art. Learn more about his prolific career which spanned more than fifty years of production.

    VideoArt Talk: Georgiana Uhlyarik on Kathleen Munn

    Art Gallery of Ontario curator Georgiana Uhlyarik discusses how Kathleen Munn, one of the country’s most significant female artists, developed her unique geometrically-based spiritual vision.