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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emily_CarrEmily Carr - Wikipedia

    Emily Carr (December 13, 1871 – March 2, 1945) was a Canadian artist who was inspired by the monumental art and villages of the First Nations and the landscapes of British Columbia. She also was a vivid writer and chronicler of life in her surroundings, praised for her "complete candour" and "strong prose". [2]

  2. View all 45 artworks. Emily Carr lived in the XIX – XX cent., a remarkable figure of Canadian Post-Impressionism and Modernism. Find more works of this artist at Wikiart.org – best visual art database.

  3. Jun 23, 2013 · Emily Carr, painter, writer (born 13 December 1871 in Victoria, BC; died 2 March 1945 in Victoria). Along with Tom Thomson, the Group of Seven and David Milne, Emily Carr was one of the pre-eminent Canadian painters of the first half of the 20th century, and perhaps the most original.

  4. Emily Carr is a Canadian icon and national heroine, known for putting the wild Western Canadian landscape and its indigenous inhabitants on the global map through paintings and writings that intimately displayed the country's interior environments and its First Nation peoples.

  5. Can. Emily Carr (born Dec. 13, 1871, Victoria, B.C., Can.—died March 2, 1945, Victoria) was a painter and writer, regarded as a major Canadian artist for her paintings of western coast Indians and landscape. While teaching art in Vancouver, B.C., Carr made frequent sketching trips to British Columbian Indian villages.

  6. Emily Carr (1871–1945) was one of the first artists of national significance to emerge from the West Coast. Along with the Group of Seven, she became a leading figure in Canadian modern art in the twentieth century. She spent the greater part of her life living and working in Victoria, where she struggled to receive critical acceptance. Early Years

  7. The Royal BC Museum’s collection includes over 100 impressive paintings and a treasure trove of 1000 sketches and handicrafts—diaries, notebooks, scrapbooks, letters and manuscripts—making up the world’s largest collection of Emily Carr materials, one which spans her entire career.

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