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Artworks
John William Beatty Canadian, 1869-1941
Forest, c 1928oil on panel10.5 x 13.5 insigned bottom rightCurrency:Further images
This oil painting by John William Beatty portrays a serene woodland interior, suffused with dappled sunlight and rich, earthy tones. The viewer stands among towering trunks that anchor the composition—robust,...This oil painting by John William Beatty portrays a serene woodland interior, suffused with dappled sunlight and rich, earthy tones. The viewer stands among towering trunks that anchor the composition—robust, mature trees rendered with thick, textured brushwork and expressive strokes typical of early 20th-century Canadian plein-air painting.
Beatty captures the play of light as it filters through the foliage, casting shifting patches of gold and green across the forest floor. The shadows are cool and deep, painted with deep blues and purples, while the illuminated bark glows with warm ochres and reds, lending the work a dynamic contrast between warmth and shadow. The central trees form a natural archway, drawing the eye inward toward a clearing brightened by filtered daylight.
The scene evokes both stillness and vitality—an intimate study of Canada’s native woodland that reflects Beatty’s influence on the landscape tradition later popularised by the Group of Seven, several of whom were his students. His handling of colour and light reveals both Impressionist influence and a distinctly Canadian sensibility—one attuned to the quiet majesty of northern forests.
Provenance
- private collection, Aurora