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Group of Seven Artist Biography

Maurice Cullen 1866-1934

Maurice Galbraigth Cullen was born in St. John’s Newfoundland in 1866. His family moved to Montreal in 1870. At the age of fifteen, he worked as a sales clerk for the dry goods firm of Galt Brothers. He studied sculpture at Monument National under Philippe Hebert whom he assisted in the making of the Apostle figures at the façade of Mary Queen of the World Cathedral. After the death of his mother in 1887, the legacy she left him enabled him to travel to Paris and study sculpture at the Ècole des Beaux-Arts. He was tremendously impressed by the work of Claude Monet and other Impressionists, which swayed him to become a painter. Between 1888 and 1892, he studied under Jean-Léon Géràme, Gustave Courtois, L.A. Rixens, Elie Delaunay, and Alfred Roll. He also painted landscapes at Moret, Pont-Aven, le Pouldu and elsewhere. In 1894, five of his paintings were shown at the Salon, and the French government bought one of his works.

In 1895, he was elected Associate of the Société nationale des Beaux-Arts, France. That same year, he returned to Montreal where he opened a studio, making sketching trips along the St. Lawrence near Quebec City and Beaupré. He usually painted the finished canvases in the studio from sketches, but on occasion also painted finished works out of doors. By 1897, he was exhibited with the Royal Canadian Academy and participated in Spring Exhibitions of the Art Association of Montreal.
His exhibition in 1900 of paintings executed in France and Canada at the Fraser Institute proved a financial flop – he was unable to sell any. At the time, there was very little interest in Canadian snow scenes. His lack of success left him undeterred however, and he continued sketching in Montreal and Levis. Most remarkable at the time were his nocturnal scenes showing lights from windows reflected in the snowy streets.

By the early teens, he was exhibiting regularly with the Canadian Art Club in Toronto. In 1918, Cullen went to France as an official war artist with the rank of captain.

The financial rewards of a number of solo exhibitions beginning in the early 1920s enabled him to retire in Chambly by the Richelieu River. He lived out his days in a stone house with a studio that had special northern light. He died in 1934 at Beaupré at the age of 68.

Cullen’s influence on later landscape art was profound. He was instrumental in establishing a particularly “Canadian” type of landscape, and his practice – inspired by the Impressionists and other 19th-century European landscapists – of sketching out doors even in the inclement Canadian winter weather was followed by many important Canadian painters, A.Y. Jackson among them.


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