John William Beatty
Canadian, 1869–1941
Painting in Northern Ontario and accompanying Group of Seven members and Tom Thomson on various sketching trips, J. W. Beatty was a painter who strove to develop a uniquely Canadian art. Born in Toronto, Beatty was apprenticed to an engraving firm then studied in London and in Paris at the Académie Julian.
In 1909, Beatty sketched with Lawren Harris in Haliburton in the spring and Memphremagog in the fall. In 1914, Beatty sketched in Algonquin Park with J.E.H. MacDonald and A.Y. Jackson. Beatty's work is generally considered to have been an early influence on Tom Thomson – the two sketched together in Algonquin Park and both had space at the Studio Building in Toronto. It was Beatty who built the cairn to Thomson's memory at Canoe Lake in 1917.
Beatty was elected to the Ontario Society of Artists and the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and was president of the Arts and Letters Club in 1912. In spring of 1914, he was commissioned by the Canadian Northern Railway to paint in the Rocky Mountains, though few paintings are known from this trip. During World War I, he was commissioned as a war artist and attached to the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1917. He traveled to Britain and the front lines in France. On his return to Canada, Beatty returned to teaching at the Ontario College of Art, and by 1921 he was the College's Acting Principal. His work was shown at Toronto galleries including the Jenkins Gallery, J. Merrit Maloney, Robert Simpson Company and the Fine Art Galleries, T. Eaton Co. Ltd., as well as internationally at the Jeu de Paume, Paris, the 1924 Wembley exhibition in England and the Boston Arts Club. The year after his death in Toronto in 1941, the Art Gallery of Toronto held a joint memorial exhibition for Beatty and Clarence Gagnon.
Beatty’s work is held in private, corporate and public collections including the National Gallery of Canada and the Art Gallery of Ontario.
Submitted by Oeno Gallery


