
When Tom Thomson drowned mysteriously in Algonquin Park in July, 1917, he left behind a legend that has burgeoned with time. People claim to see his ghost at Canoe Lake where he died. Thomson was an original, mainly selftaught, and armed with an enormous natural talent. He painted from an intense inner necessity and a consuming love of the Ontario north. Thomson was encouraged by J.E.H. MacDonald, and members of the Group of Seven, and from 1914 onward, he painted with a passionate intensity, as though experiencing the landscape for the first time.
His paintings hang in every major museum across Canada, including the National Gallery of Ottawa.