Charles William Jefferys
Further images
Charles William Jefferys’s Spring at Bobcaygeon is a bright, invigorating landscape in which the first warmth of the season seems to sweep across the shoreline. A wide band of sunlit, straw-coloured ground fills the foreground, scattered with rounded rocks picked out in mauves, pinks, and cool greys. Beyond it, a vivid blue stretch of water opens through the trees, giving the composition both depth and a strong sense of fresh air.
Jefferys uses colour boldly and decoratively. The foliage glows in lively yellow-greens, while the trunks and branches are accented with unexpected violets, blues, and warm oranges, creating a sparkling contrast against the lake. The handling is confident and textured, with broken brushwork that keeps the whole scene alive with movement and light.
Although no figures appear, the painting feels deeply observed and human in scale, as though the viewer has just stepped into a clearing at the water’s edge. Charles William Jefferys captures not just a place, but the sensation of spring in Ontario: the ground drying out, the trees beginning to quicken, and the lake shining through the woods with renewed clarity.