Marc-Aurele Fortin’s Small-Town Quebec

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “Grande Vallee” (1952)

~

Sticking (mostly) with the winter theme that I’ve been thinking about lately, Marc-Aurele Fortin is another artist in whose works winter figured prominently.  Fortin was a contemporary of the Group of Seven painters and he focused on scenes of small-town Quebec, his native province, and the landscape of the surrounding St. Lawrence River Valley.  Because he was so prolific a variety of styles can be seen in his work, but many of his paintings are typified by vibrantly colored houses and hillsides, dramatic skies and billowy cloudscapes.

While Fortin’s art is available through several prominent galleries, the Artnet website is one of the better resources to see a wide variety of his work in a single place.

Marc-Aurele Fortin 2

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “St. Urbain” (ca. 1936)

~

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “Ste. Rose Paysage” (1939)

~

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “Les Cordes a Linge” (1939)

~

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “Baie Ste. Paul Sous La Neige”

~

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “Maison Rouge en Hiver” (1918)

~

Marc-Aurele Fortin, “Winter Scene” (1940)

~

(Image Credits: Marc-Aurele Fortin)

Similar posts on O’Canada:

〉  William Kurelek and Winter on the Prairie

〉  Magical Winterscapes by Group of Seven

〉  Old Farm Tractor Along Charlevoix / St. Lawrence River

%d bloggers like this: