Laura Muntz Lyall (June 18, 1860 – December 9, 1930) was a Canadian Impressionist painter, known for her sympathetic portrayal of women and children.

Life and work

Laura Adeline Muntz was born at Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, England in 1860, but her family emigrated to Canada when she was a child. She grew up on a farm in the Muskoka District of Ontario.

Starting in 1882, she began to take classes at the Ontario School of Art in Toronto where she studied with Lucius Richard O'Brien, and later with George Agnew Reid. as well as at various French exhibitions such as the Société des Artistes Français, resulted in her paintings being reproduced in periodicals such as L'Illustration, and reviewed in Toronto's Saturday Night, and in England's the Studio, and in many other magazines and newspapers which gave her increased prestige and successful sales. But, in 1895, while she was still in Paris, the unmarried Muntz was called home from a triumphant year abroad to look after an ailing relative. Upon her return, in 1896, the Académie Colarossi, in recognition of her diligence and talent, made her "massière" or studio head.

Muntz decided to return to Canada in 1898 and set up a studio in Toronto to teach and paint. and was awarded a bronze medal at the 1904 Canadian exhibition at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, Missouri. in 1896, only the eighth woman to receive this honour.

Legacy

Laura Muntz Lyall is regarded today as an "example of achievement in a male-dominated field and as a champion of womanhood within the confines of an era". Her work The Watcher was included in 150 years 150 works, an on-line exhibition by Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) as representative of her era. Her painting A Daffodil was featured at the National Gallery of Canada in 2021. Her work was on view in the Gallery's exhibition Canada and Impressionism: New Horizons, which was shown in Ottawa from January to June 2022. In 2025, her Interesting Story was included in Reality & Reverie: Canadian and European Painting Beyond Impressionism, an exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, which concerned the ways artists gave form to interior thoughts on the part of their subjects.

Paintings

<gallery class="center" mode=trandional heights="185px" widths=185>

File:Laura Muntz Lyall - Oriental Poppies.jpg|Oriental Poppies

File:Laura Muntz Lyall - Portrait of a Young Woman.jpg|Portrait of a young woman

File:Laura Muntz-Lyall – Young Girl Holding Daffodils.jpg|Young girl holding daffodils

File:Laura-Muntz-Lyall-The-Little-Red-Hair.jpg|The Little Red Head

File:Trees by the River, 1900, by Laura Muntz-Lyall.jpg|Trees by the river (1900)

File:Laura Muntz Lyall - Interesting Story - Google Art Project.jpg|Interesting Story (1898)

</gallery>

References

Bibliography

  • Prakash, A.K. Impressionism in Canada: A Journey of Rediscovery. Stuttgart: Arnoldsche Art Publishers, 2015, pp.&nbsp;418–437.
  • Laura Muntz Lyall (1860 - 1930) at myHamilton.ca