From the Group of Seven to the Present
Canada's art scene is surprisingly rich and independent — not merely a copy of the American or European, but one that draws its strength from the overwhelming nature and multicultural identity.
🎨 Visual Arts
The Group of Seven (1920s) — seven landscape painters who brought the Canadian wilderness to canvas in bold colors and shapes — established the independent Canadian art tradition. Their works hang in the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa) and the Art Gallery of Ontario (Toronto). Emily Carr (1871–1945) documented the totem poles and rainforests of the West Coast — her works can be admired in the Vancouver Art Gallery. Contemporary Indigenous art (Norval Morrisseau, Kent Monkman) is experiencing an international boom.
📚 Literature
Margaret Atwood (The Handmaid's Tale) is Canada's literary voice — feminist, activist, visionary. Alice Munro (Nobel Prize 2013) wrote perhaps the best short stories in the English language. Michael Ondaatje (The English Patient) and Yann Martel (Life of Pi) won the Booker Prize. In French: Michel Tremblay defined Québécois literature.
🎵 Music
Canada has produced more international music stars per capita than almost any other country:
- Leonard Cohen (Montréal) — “Hallelujah," “Suzanne." Poet, songwriter, legend.
- Joni Mitchell (Alberta) — “Big Yellow Taxi," “Both Sides Now." One of the most influential singer-songwriters of all time.
- Drake (Toronto) — the most-streamed artist in Spotify history.
- Arcade Fire (Montréal) — indie rock pioneers, Grammy for Album of the Year.
- Céline Dion (Québec) — “My Heart Will Go On." Over 200 million albums sold worldwide.
- The Weeknd (Toronto) — R&B superstar, “Blinding Lights."
- Neil Young (Ontario) — “Heart of Gold." Rock legend and environmental activist.
🎬 Film & TV
Vancouver is called “Hollywood North” — the third-largest film and TV production city in North America after Los Angeles and New York. Countless Hollywood films and series are shot here (The X-Files, Deadpool, Supernatural). Toronto is known for the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) — one of the world's most important film festivals and a springboard for Oscar contenders (September).
