Artistic development of Tom Thomson

The artistic development of Tom Thomson

Tom Thomson photographed by T. H. Marten on Lake Scugog, 1910.

Tom Thomson (1877–1917) was a Canadian painter from the beginning of the 20th century. Beginning from humble roots, his development as a career painter was meteoric, only pursuing it seriously in the final years of his life. He became one of the foremost figures in Canadian art, leaving behind around 400 small oil sketches and around fifty larger works on canvas.

Beginning his career in 1902 as a graphic designer, he only began to paint seriously in 1912 at the age of 35. His skills developed as he ventured through Algonquin Park, sketching scenes that interested him. His creative peak came from 1914 until his untimely death in 1917. His art style progressed from sombre, grey scenes into brilliantly coloured exposés, characterized by rapid and thickly applied brushstrokes. His later works presage the advances seen by the Abstract Expressionist movement.

Materials and working method

Sketch to canvas

916 × 10916 in). National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
In the Northland, Winter 1915–16. 101.7 × 114.5 cm (40116 × 45116 in). Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
David Silcox has pointed to In the Northland as a striking example of the sketch to canvas transition. The canvas (right) follows the original sketch (left) closely.[1]