Artwork by George Douglas Pepper,  Norman’s Cove, Newfoundland

George Pepper
Norman’s Cove, Newfoundland

oil on canvas board
signed lower right; signed, titled and dated 1950 on the reverse
16 x 20 ins ( 40.6 x 50.8 cms )

Auction Estimate: $3,500.00$2,500.00 - $3,500.00

Price Realized $3,360.00
Sale date: March 23rd 2015

Provenance:
Private Collection, Newfoundland
Located in the northwest of the Avalon Peninsula, Norman’s Cove is approximately one hundred kilometres from St. John’s. Although the Avalon Peninsula is home to more than half of the population of the island of Newfoundland, Norman’s Cove’s 2006 population is recorded as 773 people.

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George Douglas Pepper
(1903 - 1962) Canadian Group of Painters, OSA, RCA

A native of Ottawa, George Pepper studied for four years at the Ontario College of Art in Toronto (1920-1924) and then went to Italy and France to perfect his technique, notably at the Academie de la Grande Chaumiere in Paris. He lived first in Ottawa, and then Toronto where he began to teach at the Ontario College of Art in 1930. He became vice-principal of that institution in 1950. He enlisted in March 1943 as a war artist and served until June 1946.

The themes of his paintings include anti-aircraft defences in England and troop training in western Canada. It was, however, in North-West Europe that he spent most of his time, painting the men and officers of the Second Canadian Infantry Division. After the war he returned to teaching. He lived in Newfoundland and the Arctic and in Spain in 1956. He was one of the founding members of the Canadian Group of Painters and was elected to the Royal Canadian Academy in 1956. He died six years later in Toronto, in 1962.