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Jack Bush

Jack Hamilton Bush

Jack Bush was a Canadian abstract painter, born and deceased in Toronto, Ontario. His paintings are associated with the Color Field movement and Post-painterly Abstraction.

In his early stages, Bush was influenced by the work of Charles Comfort and the Group of Seven. During the 1930s, he ran a commercial art business and, by night, furthered his studies at the Ontario College of Art. Bush, like other Canadian artists of the time, was sheltered from major European influences. After seeing the work of the American Abstract Expressionists in New York City, Bush's canvases changed dramatically.

Bush developed his work and approach to abstraction through the 1950s. He was a member of Painters Eleven, the group founded by William Ronald in 1953 to promote abstract painting in Canada, and was soon encouraged in his art by the American art critic Clement Greenberg. Critical at first, Greenberg became a mentor to Bush and encouraged him to refine his palette, technique, and approach. As a result of Greenberg's guidance, Bush became closely tied to Color Field Painting. Bush became friends with artists associated with color-field like Jules Olitski, Kenneth Noland and also Anthony Caro. As Painters Eleven disbanded in 1960, Bush moved on, and in the end became one of the more successful artists to come from this group.

Jack Bush represented Canada at the 1967 São Paulo Art Biennial, and in 1976 the Art Gallery of Ontario toured a large retrospective of his work. He died in 1977. His son Terry was an award winning jingle writer, best known for singing "Maybe Tomorrow", the theme for the The Littlest Hobo.

Canada Post honored Jack Bush with a Canadian postage stamp and a souvenir sheet released on March 20, 2009. The stamps featured his 1964 painting, Striped Column and his 1977 painting Chopsticks.

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John Hamilton "Jack" Bush (20 March 1909 – 24 January 1977) was a Canadian abstract painter. His paintings are associated with the Color Field movement and Post-painterly Abstraction.

Bush was born in Toronto, Ontario, in 1909. As a young man, he studied with Adam Sheriff Scott and Edmond Dyonnet in Montreal, Quebec.

In his early stages, Bush was influenced by the work of Charles Comfort and the Group of Seven. During the 1940s, he ran a commercial art business and, by night, furthered his studies at the Ontario College of Art. Bush, like other Canadian artists of the time, was sheltered from major European influences. After seeing the work of the American Abstract Expressionists in New York City, Bush's canvases changed dramatically.

Bush developed his work and approach to abstraction through the 1950s. He was a member of Painters Eleven, the group founded by William Ronald in 1953 to promote abstract painting in Canada, and was soon encouraged in his art by the American art critic Clement Greenberg. Critical at first, Greenberg became a mentor to Bush and encouraged him to refine his palette, technique, and approach. As a result of Greenberg's guidance, Bush became closely tied to Color Field Painting. Bush became friends with artists associated with color-field like Jules Olitski, Kenneth Noland and also Anthony Caro. As Painters Eleven disbanded in 1960, Bush moved on, and in the end became one of the more successful artists to come from this group.

Jack Bush represented Canada at the 1967 44 São Paulo Art Biennial, and in 1976 the Art Gallery of Ontario toured a large retrospective of his work. He died in Toronto 24 January 1977. His son Terry is an award winning jingle writer, best known for singing and co-writing "Maybe Tomorrow", the theme for The Littlest Hobo.

This is a part of the Wikipedia article used under the Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA). The full text of the article is here →


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Artworks of Jack Bush are removed from WikiArt due to a copyright infringement notice.
Blocked due to a copyright claim
  • Old House, Hogg’s Hollow, 1929
  • Ward Sketch, 1929
  • French Farm House, Montreal, 1930
  • King Street West, Toronto, 1930
  • Back Yard with Figure, 1932
  • Back Garden at 43 Chudleigh, 1936
  • Windy Day, 1936
  • Bonsecours Market, 1937
  • Life Drawing – Woman, 1938
  • Church, Near King City, 1940
  • Untitled, Train Station, 1940
  • Bay, 1941
  • Farm House, 1941
  • Knife Sharpener, 1941
  • La Maison de Madame Lucien Robitaille, 1941
  • Lake Superior Near Thunder Bay, 1941
  • Marlene Deller, 1941
  • Parking Lot, 1941
  • Summer, 1941
  • Untitled, House and Telephone Pole, 1941
  • Untitled, House, Thunder Bay, 1941
  • View of Lake Superior, Near Thunder Bay, 1941
  • Country Road, 1942
  • Summer Cottage, 1942
  • Dead Trees, 1943
  • Farmyard, Hogg’s Hollow, Toronto, 1943
  • Hogg’s Hollow, Toronto, 1943
  • Swansea, 1943
  • North York, Toronto, 1943
  • Tinton’s Farm, Hogg’s Hollow, Toronto, 1943
  • Untitled, Red House, 1943
  • Untitled, Smoke Stack, 1943
  • A Barn, 1944
  • Backyard, Haliburton, 1944
  • Farm House, Caledon, 1944
  • RCAF Elem. School, Eglinton, 1944
  • Sketch, North York Market, 1944
  • Woods in Autumn, 1944
  • Haunted House, 1945
  • Tulips, 1945
  • Boats on the Beach, 1946
  • Dark Country, 1946
  • On the Verandah, Belfountain, 1946
  • Red White Blue, 1946
  • The Fisherman, 1946
  • Blue Pyramid, 1947
  • Grey Day – Mattawa, 1947
  • In the Afternoon, Mattawa, 1947
  • White Buildings, 1947
  • Nude Study, 1949
  • Ferry at Bigwin Island, 1952
  • Lemon in a Basket, 1952
  • Untitled (WC127), 1952
  • Watermelon on Chair, 1952
  • Sailboats, Lake of Bays, 1953
  • Nude, 1954
  • Still Life with Knife, 1954
  • Childhood, 1955
  • Man and Woman #1, 1955
  • May, 1955
  • Summer No. 3, 1956
  • Collage For Christmas, 1957
  • Three Greens and Black, 1958
  • Yellow Flower, 1958
  • Moonflight, 1961
  • Split Circle #3, 1961
  • Narrow Image, 1963
  • Blue Green Split, 1964
  • Striped Column, 1964
  • Stripped to the Right, 1965
  • Colour Column on Suede, 1965
  • Nice Pink, 1965
  • Colour Column on Suede, 1965
  • Tall Spread, 1966
  • Mabel's Release #5, 1966
  • Down and Across, 1967
  • Grey V, 1967
  • Big A, 1968
  • Purple Blush, 1968
  • Blue Bar, 1970
  • Apple Blossom Burst, 1971
  • Purple Drops, 1971
  • Low Sun, 1971
  • Green Loop, 1971
  • Red M, 1971
  • Three and Blue Loop, 1971
  • Yellow Mark, 1971
  • Bluegold, 1973
  • Sing, Sing, Sing, 1974
  • Takeoff, 1974
  • Cross Over, 1974
  • Low Spread, 1974
  • Pink Moon, 1974
  • Purple Thrust, 1974
  • White Flip, 1974
  • Attacca, 1975
  • Concerto, 1975
  • Flute Passage, 1975
  • Leap On Blue, 1976
  • Abstraction, ?
  • November #19 Oscar's Death, ?
  • The Wet Road, ?
  • Untitled, ?
  • Untitled, ?