Emily M. Carr Paintings


Emily Carr was a Canadian artist and writer heavily inspired by the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast. Born on December 13, 1871, in Victoria, British Columbia, Carr was one of the first painters in Canada to adopt a modernist and post-impressionist painting style. Her work is known for its portrayal of the natural landscape and indigenous culture of the West Coast of Canada.

Carr began her artistic training at the San Francisco Art Institute in 1890 and later studied in England at the Westminster School of Art and in France. Her early work was influenced by the European styles of her training, but upon returning to Canada, she developed a unique style that combined elements of the indigenous art forms with the modernist trends of that time.

In 1912, Carr took a pivotal trip to various indigenous communities in British Columbia, where she created a series of sketches and paintings of totem poles and village scenes. These works were some of the first to document the art and culture of these communities. However, her work received little recognition at the time, and she eventually stopped painting to run a boarding house in Victoria.

Carr's career was revitalized in the late 1920s when the National Gallery of Canada included her in an exhibition of West Coast art. She became associated with the Group of Seven, a collective of Canadian landscape painters. With this renewed interest in her work, Carr began to paint again, focusing on the landscapes of British Columbia and the spiritual representation of nature in her work.

Carr was also a prolific writer, and her books about her experiences among the indigenous peoples and her views on nature and art are still widely read. Her writing is often interwoven with her artistic ethos, providing insight into her life and the motivations behind her work.

Emily Carr suffered from various health issues throughout her life, and her productivity declined in her later years. She passed away on March 2, 1945, in Victoria, British Columbia. Today, Carr is remembered as a pioneering artist whose work has had a lasting impact on Canadian art and culture. Her paintings and writings celebrate the spirit and beauty of Canada's western landscape and the rich cultural heritage of its indigenous peoples.