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Windsor

Group of Seven in Amherstburg: New exhibition brings iconic paintings to the county

The work of some of Canada most iconic artistsison display in Amherstburg,and you can check it out for free.

Art Windsor Essex expands reach into Essex County

Group of Seven exhibition comes to Amherstburg

2 years ago
Duration 2:08
River Bookshop owner Richard Peddie and Jennifer Matotek, executive director of Art Windsor Essex, talk about the pop-up exhibition Group of Seven: Not Formed in a Day.

The work of some of Canada's best known artists areon display in Amherstburg as part of a temporary free exhibition.

The pop-upGroup of Seven: Not Formed in a Day, opened on July 1 and will run until July 10.

It's a partnership betweentheRiver Bookshop andArt Windsor Essex, formerly known as the Art Gallery of Windsor.

The Group of Seven were landscape painters whose most popular work dates from the 1920s to 1930s. Members includeFranklin Carmichael, Lawren Harris and A. Y. Jackson.

Before findingsuccess,they were outcasts up against anart establishment that dismissed their work as too commercial, explained Richard Peddie, owner of the River Bookshop.

"They are the artists that really became the first Canadian art style, and they did it based on the Canadian landscape," said Peddie.

Richard Peddie is co-presenting the Group of Seven exhibition in Amherstburg with Art Windsor Essex. (Katerina Georgieva/CBC)

The exhibitionfeatures thoseiconic brightly coloured images, butArt Windsor Essexexecutive director Jennifer Matotek said it also includessome things that people might not have seen before includingprintmaking, lithography and wood engraving.

The project reflects the art gallery's pushto expand its reach into Essex County something that is also reflected in the gallery's new name.

"It's a pretty big deal that we're actually bringing our collection out into the county in a way that we never have before," said Matotek.

The exhibition is taking place at the Hole in the Wall space above River Bookshop on Richmond Street in Amherstburg. Doors are open from noon to 5 p.m. daily and the exhibition runs until July 10.