Laura Muntz Lyall
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Laura Muntz Lyall, June 18, 1860 – December 9, 1930, was a Canadian impressionist painter. Born Laura Adeline Muntz in Radford, Warwickshire, England, her family emigrated to Canada when she was a child to farm in the Muskoka District of Ontario.
As a young woman, Muntz studied to teach school, but her interest in art led to her take lessons in painting technique from W.C. Forster of Hamilton, Ontario. Encouraged, she traveled to Paris, France to study at the renowned Académie Colarossi where she was influenced by the impressionist style. On her return to Canada, she set up a studio in Toronto and became an Associate of the Royal College of Art (ARCA).
Laura Muntz Lyall was the first female artist to receive recognition outside of Canada. Some of her works exhibited at the 1893 World Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois, and then in 1894 as part of the Société des artistes français in Paris. However, she interrupted her career following the death of her sister, when she took responsibility for raising her sister's 11 children. It would be nine years before she devoted time to painting, but she lived only a few more years and died in 1930 in Toronto.
Lyall is interred in the Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Toronto.
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Original Impressionists | Frédéric Bazille · Eugène Boudin · Gustave Caillebotte · Mary Cassatt · Paul Cézanne · Edgar Degas · Armand Guillaumin · Édouard Manet · Claude Monet · Berthe Morisot · Camille Pissarro · Pierre-Auguste Renoir · Alfred Sisley |
Patrons | Gustave Caillebotte · Henry O. Havemeyer · Ernest Hoschedé |
Dealers | Paul Durand-Ruel · Georges Petit · Ambroise Vollard |
American Impressionists | Frederick Carl Frieseke · Childe Hassam · Willard Metcalf · Lilla Cabot Perry · Theodore Robinson · John Henry Twachtman · J. Alden Weir |
Other impressionists | Lovis Corinth · Max Liebermann · Max Slevogt · Konstantin Korovin · Valentin Serov · Francisco Oller y Cestero · Laura Muntz Lyall · Władysław Podkowiński · Nazmi Ziya Güran · Chafik Charobim |
In other art forms | Impressionist music · Impressionism (literature) · French Impressionist Cinema |
See also | Post-Impressionism |