Royal Canadian Academy of Arts














































Royal Canadian Academy of Arts

Canadian Academy of Arts 1880.gif
Canadian Academy of Arts, 1880

Abbreviation RCA
Formation 1880
Type Arts organization
Legal status Active
Purpose Advocate and public voice, educator and network
Headquarters
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Region served
Canada
Membership
Over 790
Official language
English, French

The Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (RCA) is a Canadian arts-related organization that was founded in 1880.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 1880 to 1890


    • 1.2 1891 to present




  • 2 Members


    • 2.1 1880 to 1890


    • 2.2 Academy membership in 1907


    • 2.3 Inducted in 1999


    • 2.4 Inducted in 2002


    • 2.5 Inducted in 2006


    • 2.6 Inducted in 2007


    • 2.7 Inducted in 2008


    • 2.8 Inducted in 2009


    • 2.9 Inducted in 2010


    • 2.10 Inducted in 2011


    • 2.11 Inducted in 2012


    • 2.12 Inducted in 2013


    • 2.13 Inducted in 2014


    • 2.14 Inducted in 2015


    • 2.15 Inducted in 2016


    • 2.16 Inducted in 2017


    • 2.17 Inductees for 2018


    • 2.18 Others




  • 3 See also


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links





History



1880 to 1890


The title of Royal Canadian Academy of Arts was received from Queen Victoria on 16 July 1880. The Governor General of Canada, the Marquess of Lorne, was its first patron. The painter Lucius O’Brien was its first President.


The objects of the Academy as stated in the 1881 publication of the organization's constitution[1] were three-fold:



  • First - the institution of a National Gallery at the seat of Government;

  • Second - the holding of Exhibitions in the principal cities of the Dominion;

  • Third - the establishment of Schools of Art and Design.


In the same publication, two levels of membership were described: Academicians and Associates. No more than forty individuals could be Academicians at one time, while the number of Associates was not limited. All Academicians were required to give an example of their work to the collection of the National Gallery. They were also permitted to show more pieces in Academy-sponsored exhibitions than Associates.[1]


The inaugural exhibition was held in Ottawa and the first Academicians were inducted, including the first woman Academician, Charlotte Schreiber. Through the next 10 years, the Academy held annual exhibitions, often in cooperation with regional artists' societies. Exhibitions in Toronto were a joint project of the Academy and the Ontario Society of Artists, while those held in Montreal were held in partnership with the Montreal Artists Association. Exhibitions were also held in St. John, New Brunswick, and Halifax, Nova Scotia.[2] Additional academicians and associates were added each year until the membership had more than doubled by 1890. Members were drawn from all areas of the country and included anglophones and francophones. Men continued to out-number women and those female members were identified as painters not as designers or architects.[3]


As Academicians joined, they donated an example of their work to the National Gallery of Canada, building the collection of the as-yet unincorporated institution. A temporary home was found for the collection in a building next to the Supreme Court of Canada and the first curator, John W. H. Watts, RCA was appointed to begin organizing exhibitions.[4]


The third objective—to encourage the teaching of art and design in Canada—was found to be more challenging to address with the limited financial resources available to them.[2]



1891 to present


Canadian landscape painter Homer Watson was elected as an associate, became a full member and later became president of the Academy.


The centennial year of the Academy was honoured by a 35 cent, 3 colour postage stamp.[5] The stamp features an image of the original centre block of the Parliament Buildings and the text "Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1880–1980", with the name "Thomas Fuller", a member of the Academy and the Dominion Architect of Canada [6] who had designed the original building.



Members


The Academy is composed of members from across Canada representing over twenty visual arts disciplines. This list is not inclusive. See also Category:Members of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.



1880 to 1890























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Name[7]
Sex
Discipline[7]
1880[3]
1881[8]
1882[8]
1883[9]
1884[10]
1886[11]
1887[12]
1888[13]
1890[14]

Aaron Allan Edson
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA



William Nichol Cresswell
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA




Daniel Fowler (1810–1894)
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

John Arthur Fraser (1838–1898)
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA



James Griffiths (1825–1896)
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Joseph Arthur Eugene Hamel (1845–1932)
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA




Robert Harris
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

John William Hopkins (1825–1905)[15]
male
architect
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Henry Langley
male
architect
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Lucius Richard O'Brien
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

William Raphael
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Henry Sandham
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA (non-resident)
RCA (non-resident)
RCA (non-resident)
RCA (non-resident)
RCA (non-resident)

Charlotte Schreiber
female
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA



François Van Luppen (1838–1899)
male
sculptor
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA




James Smith (1832–1918)[16]
male
architect
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Thomas Seaton Scott
male
architect
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA


William George Storm
male
architect
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Thomas Mower Martin
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Forshaw Day
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

John Colin Forbes (1846–1925)
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Henri Perré (1828–1890)
male
painter
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

John William Hurrell Watts (1850–1917)
male
designer

RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Homer Watson
male
painter


RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Thomas W. Fuller
male
architect


RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Alexander Cowper Hutchison (1838–1922)
male
architect


RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Marmaduke Matthews
male
painter



RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

John George Howard
male
architect



RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired


Antoine Plamondon
male
painter



RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired
RCA retired

Napoléon Bourassa
male
painter



RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

William Armstrong
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA



Robert Richard Baigent (1830–1890)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




Harrington Bird (1846–1936)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Frederick Alexander Turner Dunbar (1849–1921)
male
sculptor



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA



Robert Ford Gagen (1847–1926)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Michael Hannaford (1832–1891)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


George Harvey (1846–1910)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Louis-Philippe Hébert
male
sculptor



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Frances Bannerman
female
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Henry Martin (1832–1902)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

John Christopher Miles (1837–1911)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Andrew Dickson Patterson (1854–1930) [17]
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA

Paul Peel
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

William Revell (1830–1902)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Joseph Thomas Rolph (1831–1916)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

William Ruel
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Frances Elwood Richards (1852–1934)
female
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




Edward Scrope Shrapnel
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Edward Buckingham Shuttleworth (1842–1934)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

James L. Weston (1815–1896)
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




Robert R. Whale
male
painter



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA



William Doughtie (1846–1883)
male
designer



ARCA






Eugène-Étienne Taché
male
designer



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA



Alfred Harold Howard (1854–1916)
male
designer



ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Robert McCausland (1856–1923)
male
designer



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

James Balfour
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Charles Baillairgé
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA





Edmund Burke
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Walter Chesterton (1845–1931)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Joseph Connolly
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Frank Darling
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

David Brash Dick (1846–1925)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCAre

Andrew Dewar (1846 – c. 1932)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


G. Ernest Fairweather
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA





Robert Gage
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
(1851–1915)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Henry Bauld Gordon
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

William Critchlow Harris
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

William Irving (1830–1883)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA





John Thomas Charles McKean (1840–1911)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Charles Willer Mulligan (1846–1908)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




James Nelson (1831–1913)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Almond E. Paull (1824–1902)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




Alexander Denton Steele (1841–1890)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

William Stewart (1832–1907)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA





David Stirling
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




Walter Reginald Strickland (1841–1915)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA




Richard Cunningham Windeyer (1831–1900)
male
architect



ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Otto Reinhold Jacobi
male
painter




RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

William Brymner
male
painter




ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

Arthur Cox (1840–1917)
male
painter




ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

James A. Sydney Crocker
male
painter




ARCA
ARCA




Percy Franklin Woodcock (1855–1936)
male
painter




ARCA
ARCA
RCA
RCA
RCA

William Tutin Thomas
male
architect




ARCA





Alfred Boisseau (1823–1901)
male
painter





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

William Cruikshank
male
painter





ARCA
ARCA



John Wycliffe Lowes Forster
male
painter





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

James Kerr-Lawson (1865–1939)
male
painter





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

John Charles Pinhey (1860–1912)
male
painter





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

George Agnew Reid
male
painter





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

John Ellis
male
designer





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


John Thompson Willing
male
designer





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Henry Frederick Busch (1826–1902)
male
architect





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Samuel George Curry
male
architect





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Alexander Francis Dunlop
male
architect





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

George F. Durand (1850–1889)
male
architect





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Robert McNicol (fl. 1881–83)
male
architect





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA


Andrew Taylor
male
architect





ARCA
ARCA
ARCA
ARCA

Hamilton MacCarthy
male
sculptor






ARCA
ARCA
RCA

Frederick Charles S. Gordon (1856–1924)
male
painter







ARCA
ARCA

Emma S. Windeat (fl. 1884–1926)[18]
female
painter







ARCA
ARCA
























































































































































Name[7]
discipline[7]
1896[19]
W E Atkinson (Canadian painter active in England, 1862–1926)
painter
ARCA

George Théodore Berthon
painter
RCA

Peleg Franklyn Brownell (1857–1946)
painter
RCA

George Robert Bruenech (1851–1916)
painter
ARCA

Frederick Sproston Challener, (1869–1959)
painter
ARCA

Gertrude Spurr Cutts (1858–1941)
painter
ARCA

Edmond Dyonnet
painter
ARCA

Mary Alexandra Eastlake née Bell (1864–1951)
painter
ARCA

Harriet Ford (1859–1939)
painter
ARCA

James Lillie Graham (1873–1971)
painter
ARCA

Edmund Wyly Grier
painter
RCA

John A. Hammond
painter
RCA

Sarah Holden
painter
ARCA

William R. Hope (1863–1931)
painter
ARCA

F. McGillivray S. S. Knowles (1859–1932)
painter
ARCA

Laura Muntz Lyall
painter
ARCA

Hamilton MacCarthy
sculptor
RCA

C.M. Manly (1855–1924)[20]
painter
ARCA

Joseph W. Power
architect
ARCA

Mary Augusta Hiester Reid (1854–1921)
painter
ARCA

William Albert Sherwood (1855–1919)
painter
ARCA

W. L. Symons
architect
ARCA

S. H. Townsend
architect
ARCA

Sydney Strickland Tully (1869–1911)
painter
ARCA

Frederick Arthur Verner
painter
ARCA

Carl Henry Ahrens (1863–1936)
painter
ARCA

Paul Giovanni Wickson (1860–1922)
painter
ARCA

Albert Curtis Williamson (1867–1944)
painter
ARCA

Emma S. Windeat (fl. 1884–1926)[18]
painter
ARCA


Academy membership in 1907


Academicians





  • Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith, painter[21]


  • Peleg Franklyn Brownell, painter[21]


  • William Brymner, painter[21]


  • Frederick Sproston Challener, painter[21]


  • William Cruikshank, painter[21]


  • Alexander Francis Dunlop, architect[21]


  • Edmond Dyonnet, painter[21]


  • Edmund Wyly Grier, painter[21]


  • Gustav Hahn, designer[21]


  • John A. Hammond, painter[21]


  • Robert Harris, painter[21]


  • Louis-Philippe Hébert, sculptor[21]


  • William R. Hope, painter[21]


  • Alfred Harold Howard, designer[21]


  • A.C. Hutchison, architect[21]


  • F. McGillivray S. S. Knowles, painter[21]


  • Hamilton Thomas Carleton Plantagenet MacCarthy, sculptor[21]


  • Thomas Mower Martin, painter[21]


  • Marmaduke Matthews, painter[21]


  • Andrew Dickson Patterson, painter[21]


  • John Charles Pinhey, painter[21]


  • George Agnew Reid, painter[21]


  • James Smith, architect[21]


  • Homer Watson, painter[21]


  • John William Hurrell Watts, designer[21]



Associates





  • William Edwin Atkinson (1862–1926)[7][21]


  • John William Beatty[21]


  • Harry Britton[22]


  • George Robert Bruenech (1851–1916)[7][21]


  • Florence Carlyle[21]


  • Arthur Cox (1840–1917)[7][21]


  • Maurice Galbraith Cullen[21]


  • Gertrude Spurr Cutts[21]


  • John Wycliffe Lowes Forster[21]


  • Joseph Charles Franchere (1866–1921)[7][21]


  • Robert Ford Gagen[21]


  • James Lillie Graham[21]


  • Clara Sophia Hagarty (1871–1958)[7][21]


  • C.M. Manly[21]


  • John Christopher Miles[21]


  • Edmund Montague Morris (1871–1913)[7][21]


  • Laura Muntz Lyall[21]


  • Sophie Pemberton[21]


  • Mary Augusta Hiester Reid[21]


  • Joseph Thomas Rolph[21]


  • Joseph St Charles (1868–1956)[7][21]


  • William Albert Sherwood[21]


  • William St. Thomas Smith (1862–1947)[7][21]


  • Sydney Strickland Tully[21]


  • Frederick Arthur Verner[21]


  • Albert Curtis Williamson[21]


  • Emma S. Windeat[21]




Inducted in 1999




  • Chris Cran[23]



Inducted in 2002





  • Catherine Crowston, arts administrator

  • Ann Davis, arts administrator

  • Trudy Golley, ceramics


  • Robert Mellin, architect


  • Pitaloosie Saila, printmaker


  • George A. Walker, book designer




Inducted in 2006



  • Paul Wm. Leathers, metalsmithing



Inducted in 2007





  • Aggie Beynon, metalsmithing[24]


  • Alexandre Castonguay, digital art[24]


  • Douglas Coupland, sculptural installation[24]


  • Karen Dahl, ceramics[24]


  • James Doran, enamel sculpture[24]


  • Noam Gonick, film making[24]


  • Robert W. Harrison, ceramics[24]


  • Enid Legros-Wise, ceramics[24]


  • Laura L. Letinsky, photography[24]


  • Simon Neil Minuk, architecture[24]


  • Paula Murray, ceramics[24]


  • Grace Nickel, ceramics[24]


  • Richard James Rivet, painting, printmaking[24]


  • Michael Smith, painting[24]


  • Arlene Stamp, two dimensional art and design[24]


  • Reva Stone, digital art[24]


  • Ewa Tarsia, painting, printmaking[24]


  • Ione Thorkelsson, glass[24]


  • Henri Venne, painting, photography[24]


  • Kamila Wozniakowska, painting[24]




Inducted in 2008



  • Catherine Farish, printmaking


Inducted in 2009



  • Sara Diamond

  • Marius Dubois

  • Christian Eckart

  • Faye Heavyshield

  • Garry Neil Kennedy

  • Rita McKeough

  • Mary Scott

  • John Will

  • Justin Wonnacott



Inducted in 2010





  • Chantal Gilbert, metal[25]


  • Robert Jekyll, stained glass[25]


  • Lou Lynn, glass and metal[25]


  • Janice Wright-Cheney, textiles[25]




Inducted in 2011





  • Philip Beesley, architecture[26]


  • Sonia Chow, graphic design[26]


  • Richard Thomas Davis, painting, drawing, printmaking[26]


  • Leya Evelyn, painting[26]


  • FASTWÜRMS, mixed media[26]


  • Wyn Geleynse, video art[26]


  • Peter Krausz, painting, drawing[26]


  • Charles Lewton-Brain, metalsmithing[26]


  • Alex Livingston, painting, digital art[26]


  • Mike Massie, jewellery[26]


  • Laura Millard, painting, photography[26]


  • John Noestheden, works on paper, drawing[26]


  • Stu Oxley, painting, printmaking[26]


  • Anne Ramsden, installation, mixed media, photography[26]


  • Dan Steeves, printmaking[26]


  • Denis Villeneuve, filmmaking[26]




Inducted in 2012




  • Andre Bergeron[27]


  • Sandra Bromley[27]


  • Tara Bryan[27]


  • Ginette Caron[27]


  • Sean Caulfield[27]


  • Naomi London[27]


  • Sarah Maloney[27]


  • Jean Pierre Morin[27]


  • Nadia Myre[27]


  • Anna Torma[27]



Inducted in 2013




  • Clarence Dick[27]


  • Christos Dikeakos,[27] whose work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art


  • Charles Elliott[27]


  • Lynda Gammon[27]


  • Rusdi Genest[27]


  • Chief Tony Hunt[27]


  • Eva Lapka, ceramics[28]


  • David MacWilliam[27]


  • Les Manning[27]


  • Barbara Paterson[27]


  • Susan G. Scott[27]


  • Andrew Wright[27]



Inducted in 2014




  • Diane Bisson[29]


  • Marc Boutin[29]


  • Luben Boykov[29]


  • Karen Cantine[29]


  • Donna Clare[29]


  • Cora Cluett[29]


  • Gene Dub, architect[29]


  • Frédéric Metz[29]


  • Louie Palu, photographer[29]


  • Claude Provencher[29]


  • Russell Yuristy[29]



Inducted in 2015




  • Claude Cormier, landscape architecture[30]

  • Jacques Fournier, bookbinding[30]


  • Libby Hague, printmaking[30]

  • Tanya Harnett, interdisciplinary[30]

  • Wesley Harris, metalsmithing[30]


  • Peter Jacobs, landscape architecture[30]


  • Lew Yung-Chien, photography[30]

  • Amy Loewan, installation, mixed media[30]


  • Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, interdisciplinary[30]

  • Marie-Christiane Mathieu, interdisciplinary[30]

  • Alexandra McCurdy, ceramics[30]


  • Nancy Petry, mixed media[30]

  • Alan Stein, book design[30]

  • John Taylor, photography[30]



Inducted in 2016




  • Shuvinai Ashoona, drawing[31]


  • David Blatherwick, painting[31]


  • Ricardo L. Castro, photography, architecture[31]

  • Alan R. Collyer, architecture[31]


  • Rosalie Favell, photography[31]

  • Les Graff, painting[31]

  • Andrew Gruft, architecture[31]


  • James Hart, sculpture[31]

  • Helen Kerr, industrial design[31]

  • Alain LeBrun, illustration, graphic design[31]


  • Marian Penner Bancroft, photography, video art[31]

  • Frank Shebageget, sculpture, installation[31]

  • Allyson Simmie, jewelery design[31]

  • Brendan Lee Satish Tang, sculpture[31]

  • Peter von Tiesenhausen, sculpture, installation[31]


  • Ian Wallace, photography, painting[31]


  • Elizabeth Zvonar, collage, sculpture[31]



Inducted in 2017



  • Yael Brotman, printmaking[32]


  • Diana Dean, painting, sculpture[32]

  • Keith L. Graham, architecture[32]

  • Barrie Jones, photography[32]


  • Royden Mills, sculpture[32]

  • Craig Richards, photography[32]

  • Jean-Daniel Rohrer, painting[32]

  • Marie Saint Pierre, fashion design[32]



Inductees for 2018



  • David Alexander, painting[33]

  • Noel Best, architecture[33]

  • Anne Carrier, architecture[33]


  • Pierre Coupey, painting[33]

  • Shayne Dark, sculpture[33]

  • Lucy Hogg, painting[33]


  • Katherine Knight, photography[33]

  • Gary Pearson, painting and drawing[33]

  • Udo Schliemann, design[33]



Others



  • Sheila Butler


  • George Cuthbertson (1929-2017), yacht designer[34]


  • Robert Wakeham Pilot[35]


  • Leslie Reid (artist) (1947-), inducted 1977, painter and printmaker[36]


  • John A. Schweitzer (1952-), collagist


  • Philip Surrey (1910-1990), painter


  • Campbell Tinning (1910-1996), painter


  • Gentile Tondino (1923-2001), painter



See also


  • List of Canadian organizations with royal patronage


References





  1. ^ ab Constitution and Laws of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts. Toronto: Globe Printing Co., Printer. 1881. p. 1..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ ab Report and review of financial position and prospective policy of the Academy to His Excellency the Most Hon. the Marquis of Lansdowne, Governor-General, Patron of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1886. Ottawa: Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. 1886.


  3. ^ ab Records of the Founding of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts. Toronto: Globe Printing Co. 1879–80. p. 16.


  4. ^ "Our History: Pre 1900". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 30 October 2013.


  5. ^ Credit: Library and Archives Canada; Copyright: Canada Post Corporation


  6. ^ Dominion Architect


  7. ^ abcdefghijkl "Members since 1880". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Archived from the original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2013.


  8. ^ ab Records of the Founding of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts. Toronto: Globe Printing Co. 1879–80. p. 27.


  9. ^ Records of the Founding of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts. Toronto: Globe Printing Co. 1879–80. p. 28.


  10. ^ Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1884. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1884.


  11. ^ Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1886. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1886.


  12. ^ Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1887. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1887.


  13. ^ Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1888. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1888.


  14. ^ Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1890. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1890.


  15. ^ "Royal Insurance Company's Building (late Merchants Bank), Montreal, c. 1866". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  16. ^ "St. James Square Presbyterian Church, Toronto, 1880". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  17. ^ "A. Dickson Patterson". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  18. ^ ab McMann, Evelyn de R. (2003). Biographical Index of Artists in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 246. ISBN 9780802027900.


  19. ^ Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1896. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1896.


  20. ^ "C.M. Manly". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  21. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxay Annual Exhibition Catalogue of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, 1907. Montreal: Art Association of Montreal. 1907.


  22. ^ Creative Canada: A Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Creative and Performing Artists. Volume 1. University of Toronto Press. 1971. p. 1760. ISBN 1442637838.


  23. ^ "Members Since 1880". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. 1999. Retrieved 11 September 2015.


  24. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrst "New members 2007". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Archived from the original on 28 May 2007. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  25. ^ abcd "Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts celebrates four craft artists". The Canadian Crafts Federation. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  26. ^ abcdefghijklmnop "INDUCTION 2011" (PDF). Royal Canadian Academy of Arts News. Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
    [permanent dead link]



  27. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstu New Members, 2014, retrieved 5 March 2014


  28. ^ "Eva Lapka: Expressions". Visual Arts Centre, Montreal. Retrieved 20 October 2013.


  29. ^ abcdefghijk "New Members". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 14 March 2015.


  30. ^ abcdefghijklmn "New Members". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 20 March 2018.


  31. ^ abcdefghijklmnopq "New Members". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 20 March 2018.


  32. ^ abcdefgh "New Members". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 20 March 2018.


  33. ^ abcdefghi "Home". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 20 March 2018.


  34. ^ G+M: "Designer George Cuthbertson crafted sleek, speedy sailboats", 20 Oct 2017


  35. ^ "Robert Pilot". Heffel.com. Archived from the original on 2 September 2015. Retrieved 5 October 2015.


  36. ^ "Leslie Reid". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 8 December 2018.




External links


  • Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, official site



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