“Some people say the art is dying,” says Natar Ungalaq. “Is Inuit art dying? I don’t think so. I think it’s going to stay forever. The only way it will die is if we run out of rock.”
The exhibition of twenty works titled The Noble Art of the Carracci and their School: A Selection of Drawings and Prints , presented at the National Gallery of Canada until January 2014, highlights the ways in...
In mid-nineteenth-century Canada, expansion was in the air. Industry, strengthened by a flurry of railway building, was eager to exploit the vast resources of the Interior. Young farmers, unable to find land...
Peter Paul Rubens is a household name—one of those painters we’ve all heard about, but likely don’t really know. Famous for painting full-figured women, he produced an enormous body of work, and was himself...
Opening on 17 May, Sakahàn will feature more than 150 works by over 80 contemporary artists from around the world, making it the largest-ever global survey of contemporary Indigenous art.
The Art Gallery of Alberta’s partnership with the National Gallery of Canada will fill Edmonton's spring with Dutch historical landscapes alongside well-known Canadian works on the same theme.
In January 2013, Janet Cardiff’s Forty-Part Motet takes centre stage at the Winnipeg Art Gallery (WAG), kicking off a three-year partnership with the National Gallery of Canada.
Towards the end of her life, Watkins — tight-lipped about her past as a photographer — handed a sealed box containing all her photographs to her neighbour Joseph Mulholland, with strict instructions to open it...