Maurice
Haycock fell in love with the Canadian Arctic
in 1926-27 during a year spent living with
the Inuit of Pangnirtung Fiord, Baffin Island.
During his return home in 1927 he was influenced
by a chance meeting with Group of Seven artist
A. Y. Jackson. Haycock began painting in
the early 1930's. By the 1940's he had become
a regular painting partner of Jackson, and
in 1949 the two went north to paint at Great
Bear Lake, NWT. Following that trip Haycock
returned and painted widely throughout the
North virtually every year for almost 40
years until his death in 1988.
Haycock's paintings tell a story of geological
vastness and beauty, peace, challenge, Inuit
life, historical European exploration and
white man's impact. No other artist has traveled
and painted so extensively and with such
feeling combined with faithful and vibrant
interpretation of the landscape.
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