Maud Lewis (1903-1970) was a folk artist born in Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Maud Lewis was born in South Ohio, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia in 1903 and she died in Marshalltown, Nova Scotia in 1970. She remains one of Canada's best known and most loved folk artists.
She suffered from disabilities as a result of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, and lived most of her life in poverty with her husband in Marshalltown. She began her artistic career by hand-drawing Christmas cards. These proved popular with her husband's customers as he sold fish door to door and encouraged her to begin painting. She used bright colours in her paintings and subjects were often of oxen teams, horses, or cats. All of her paintings are of outdoor scenes. Her house was one-room with a sleeping loft and is now located in the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in Halifax.
At the age of thirty four, Maud married Everett Lewis. They were poor and lived in a small ten by twelve foot house. Soon after they were married Maud Lewis accompanied her husband on his daily rounds peddling fish, bringing along Christmas cards that she had drawn. She would sell the cards for twenty five cents each. After some success with this, she started painting on various other surfaces such as plank boards, cookie sheets, and eventually on more or less every available surface in their tiny home. It was Everett who encouraged Maud to paint and he bought her her first set of oils.
Most of Maud Lewis' paintings are quite small - often no larger than eight by ten inches, although she is known to have done at least three paintings 16 inches by 20 inches. Her technique consisted of first drawing an outline and then applying paint directly out of the tube. She never mixed colours.
Between 1945-1950, people began to stop at Maud's home and buy her paintings for two or three dollars. As time passed, her paintings began to sell from seven to ten dollars. She achieved national attention as a result of an article in the "Star Weekly" in 1964 and in 1965 she was featured on CBC-TV's ''Telescope''. Unfortunately, her arthritis deprived her from completing many of the orders that resulted from the national exposure. In recent years, her paintings have sold at ever increasing prices, and two of her paintings have sold for more than $16,000.
In the last year of her life, Maud Lewis stayed in one corner of her house, painting as often as she could while traveling back and forth to the hospital.
The largest collection of Maud's art can be found in the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, which has restored her original house and installed it in the gallery as part of a permanent Maud Lewis exhibit. A steel memorial sculpture based on her house has been erected at the original site of her house in Marshalltown, Nova Scotia. An imitation Maud Lewis house has been built a private museum in Liverpool, Nova Scotia.
Adapted from the Wikipedia article Maud Lewis, under the G. N. U. Free Documentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
Navigation
Navigation
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Diet
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Drug
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Exercise
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Hands
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Joint
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Knee
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Medicine
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Pregnancy
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Remedies
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Support
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Symptom
Maud Lewis – Introduction
Maud Lewis (1903-1970) was a folk artist born in Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada. Maud Lewis was born in South Ohio, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia in 1903 and she died in Marshalltown, Nova Scotia in 1970.
Related Articles
Konstantin Monastyrsky is a European-educated pharmacist, a former award-winning computer programmer and software entrepreneur, and a well-known Russi...
HBsAg is the surface antigen of the Hepatitis-B-Virus (HBV). It indicates current Hepatitis B infection. Adapted from the Wikipedia article HBsAg, und...
Leaky gut is a name used to describe intestinal or bowel hyperpermeability. Tight junctions (TJs) represent the major barrier within the pathway betwe...
Serositis refers to inflammation of the serous tissues of the body, the tissues lining the lungs (pleura), heart (pericardium), and the inner lining o...Related Articles
Leaky gut is a name used to describe intestinal or bowel hyperpermeability. Tight junctions (TJs) represent the major barrier within the pathway betwe...
Serositis refers to inflammation of the serous tissues of the body, the tissues lining the lungs (pleura), heart (pericardium), and the inner lining o...
Eczema is a form of dermatitis, or inflammation of the epidermis (the outer layer of the skin). In England, an estimated 5,773,700 or about one in eve...
Chronic pancreatitis is a long-standing inflammation of the pancreas that alters its normal structure and functions. It can present as episodes of acu...Related Videos
Rheumatoid arthritis affects 1.3 million Americans. Research advances and drug development have helped control this chronic disease. Noted UCLA Rheumatology expert Dr. Michael Weisman, presents...
CreakyJoints -- creakyjoints.org -- was proud to help sponsor a video series examining ways to improve one's life despite a diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA)....Featured Articles
- Flunoxaprofen - Pharmacokinetics
- Rheumatoid pleuritis - Clinical Characteristics
- Vascular endothelial growth factor - Clinical significance
- Richard Taylor (general) - Civil War
- Vimentin - Clinical significance
- Macrophage migration inhibitory factor - Possible clinical significance
- Amtolmetin guacil - Background
- The Importance of Maintaining Healthy Blood Sugar Levels
- Sweet's syndrome - Associations
- Rheumatoid factor - History






