Continental Galleries of Fine Art, Montreal
Private Collection, Montreal
Literature
J. Russell Harper, “Krieghoff,” Toronto, 1979, pages 59 and 129
Dennis Reid, “Krieghoff, Images of Canada”, Toronto, 1999, pages 232-33
Cornelius Krieghoff’s images of Canada’s Indigenous People are some of his most acclaimed works. Depictions of the Indigenous population he encountered make up approximately one-third of the artist’s known body of work. Krieghoff often portrayed this subject in an idealistic manner, depicting man’s relationship with nature. Writing of Krieghoff’s time in Quebec City between 1853 and 1863, J. Russell Harper shares that these years were the artist’s “happiest and most productive”, with an abundance of subjects for his canvases. With Huron Peoples living northwest of Quebec in the village of Lorette, Krieghoff continued to “paint small canvases of single Indian figures. Women in blankets wander up hills laden with great festoons of baskets, or carry cradle boards as they pick their way through craggy mounds of ice cakes crossing the St. Lawrence in front of the city. They are reminiscent of the women in the Montreal streets, but are infinitely more appealing as a result of increased detail and unsurpassed craftsmanship... These canvases were often dashed off with incredible rapidity when finances were low, but on other occasions the artist threw his heart into the work, painting single figures with care, pride of workmanship, and a more acute artistic sensibility.”