Molly Lamb Bobak - Beach

  • Beach
  • Oil on Canvas
  • 22 x 30 in
  • circa 1965
  • CAD $67000.00
  • Loch Gallery, Toronto


signed and dated


Molly Lamb Bobak CM ONB RCA (née Lamb; February 25, 1920 – March 2, 2014) was a Canadian teacher, writer, printmaker, and painter known for her work in oils and watercolours. During World War II, she was the first Canadian woman artist to be sent overseas to document Canada's war effort, particularly the work of the Canadian Women's Army Corps (C.W.A.C.).  Born on February 25, 1920, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Bobak grew up in an unconventional household with her father, Harold Mortimer-Lamb, a mining engineer, journalist, art critic, and collector who was friends with artists from the Group of Seven. Bobak's poor eyesight and dislike for her teachers resulted in poor school marks, leading her mother to encourage her to enroll at the Vancouver School of Art. There, she studied with artist Jack Shadbolt, who became a lifelong mentor and introduced her to European artists like Cézanne and Matisse.  Bobak enlisted in the Canadian Women's Army Corps (C.W.A.C) in 1942, where she traveled across Canada and to London, England, documenting training, marching, and other wartime activities. Her diary from November 1942 to September 1945 provides a unique visual and humorous record of C.W.A.C life. In 1945, she was appointed Canada's first female official war artist by the Canadian War Artists Selection Committee. Her significant works from this period include "Private Roy" (1946), a rare depiction of Canadian soldiers of color, now held at the Canadian War Museum.  After the war, Bobak and her husband, artist Bruno Bobak, tried to make a living on the West Coast by painting and teaching. A French Government Scholarship, facilitated by Jacques Maritain, allowed her to visit France. Alan Jarvis, Director of the National Gallery of Canada, invited her to participate in major exhibitions, which increased her financial success and popularity. She became one of the first Canadian women artists to work professionally and earn a living from her art.  The Bobaks moved to Fredericton, New Brunswick, where Bruno was offered a teaching position at the University of New Brunswick. In 1973, Molly Bobak was elected to the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, and in 1993, the MacKenzie Art Gallery organized a major touring retrospective of her work. She is recognized for her dynamic depictions of crowds and her work from World War II.  Bobak's work is included in the collections of the National Gallery of Canada and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec. Library and Archives Canada holds the Molly Lamb Bobak and Bruno Bobak fonds, containing their personal records, prints, drawings, watercolours, photographs, and textual documents.

More Artwork from this Artist

  • Beach

  • Oil on Canvas
  • 22 x 30 in
  • circa 1965
  • CAD $67000.00

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