Pegi Nicol MacLeod
Canadian, 1904 - 1949
Pegi Nicol MacLeod's watercolour and oil paintings are displays of lively, curving lines and dynamic colour. MacLeod took subject matter from the world around her - children, gardens, and crowded city scenes - to convey the energy and bustle of daily life.
The influence of the Group of Seven is evident in MacLeod's earliest landscapes. By 1933, she was beginning to paint in a more expressive, humanist style. She soon experimented with repetitive views, what she called "kaleidoscope vision," and in later works demonstrated a more abstract style. CGP;CSPW;AGO;NGC
Person TypeIndividual
Canadian; First Nations (Coast Salish), born 1983
Canadian, 1891 - 1948