Maud Kathleen Lewis (
née
The birth name is the name of the person given upon their birth. The term may be applied to the surname, the given name or to the entire name. Where births are required to be officially registered, the entire name entered onto a births registe ...
Dowley; March 7, 1903 – July 30, 1970) was a Canadian
folk artist
Folk art covers all forms of visual art made in the context of folk culture. Definitions vary, but generally the objects have practical utility of some kind, rather than being exclusively decorative. The makers of folk art are typically tra ...
from
Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia is a Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Canada, located on its east coast. It is one of the three Maritime Canada, Maritime provinces and Population of Canada by province and territory, most populous province in Atlan ...
. She lived most of her life in poverty in a small house in
Marshalltown, Nova Scotia. She achieved national recognition in 1964 and 1965 for her cheerful paintings of landscapes, animals and flowers, which offer a nostalgic and optimistic vision of her native province.
Several books, plays and films have been produced about her. She remains one of Canada's most celebrated folk artists. Her works are displayed at the
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial museums of Canada, provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up ...
, as well as her restored house, whose walls she adorned with her art. Despite her recognition, Lewis never had a museum exhibition, nor was her work collected by art galleries or museum during her lifetime.
Early life
Lewis was born in
South Ohio, Nova Scotia, the daughter of John and Agnes (Germain) Dowley.
She had one brother, Charles. She was born with birth defects and ultimately developed
rheumatoid arthritis
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a long-term autoimmune disorder that primarily affects synovial joint, joints. It typically results in warm, swollen, and painful joints. Pain and stiffness often worsen following rest. Most commonly, the wrist and h ...
, which reduced her mobility, especially in her hands. Lewis' father was a blacksmith and harness maker who owned a harness shop in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. His business enabled Lewis to enjoy a middle-class childhood.
She was introduced to art by her mother, who instructed her in the making of watercolour Christmas cards to sell.
Lewis began her artistic career by selling hand-drawn and painted Christmas cards.
Lewis' father John died in 1935, and her mother followed him in 1937.
After living with her brother for a short while, she moved to
Digby, Nova Scotia
Digby is a Canadian town in southwestern Nova Scotia. It is in the historical Digby County, Nova Scotia, county of Digby and a separate municipality from the Municipality of the District of Digby. The town is situated on the western shore of the ...
, to live with her aunt.
Marriage
Maudie Dowley married Everett Lewis, a fish peddler from
Marshalltown
Marshalltown is a city in Marshall County, Iowa, and is the county seat of the county. With a population of 27,591 at the 2020 census, it is the 16th largest city in the state. Marshalltown is home to the Iowa Veterans Home and Marshalltown C ...
, on January 16, 1938, at the age of 34. He also worked as the watchman at the county Poor Farm. According to Everett, Maud showed up at his doorstep in response to an ad he had posted in the local stores for a "live-in or keep house" for a 40-year-old bachelor. Several weeks later, they married.
They lived in Everett's one-room house with a sleeping loft, in Marshalltown, a few miles west of Digby. Maud used the house as her studio, while Everett took care of the housework.
They lived mostly in poverty.
Maud Lewis accompanied her husband on his daily rounds peddling fish door-to-door, bringing along Christmas cards she had painted. She sold the cards for five cents each, the same price her mother had charged for the cards she had made when Maud was a girl. These cards proved popular with her husband's customers. When Everett was hired as a night watchman at the neighbouring Poor Farm in 1939, Lewis began selling her Christmas cards and paintings directly from their home.
Everett encouraged Lewis to paint, and he bought her her first set of oils.
She expanded her range, using other surfaces for painting, such as pulp boards (
beaverboard
Beaverboard (also beaver board) is a fiberboard building material, formed of wood fibre compressed into sheets. It was originally a trademark for a lumber product built up from the fibre of clean white spruce made from 1906 until 1928 by the Bea ...
s), cookie sheets, and
Masonite
Masonite board
Back side of a masonite board
Isorel,
Quartrboard, Masonite Corporation,
Masonite, also called Quartboard or pressboard, is a type of engineered wood made of steam-cooked and pressure-molded wood or paper fibers. The fibers ...
. Lewis was a prolific artist and also painted on more or less every available surface in their tiny home: walls, doors, breadboxes, and even the stove. She completely covered the simple patterned commercial wallpaper with sinewy stems, leaves, and blossoms.
[Laurie Hamilton, ''The Painted House of Maud Lewis'', Goose Lane Editions (2001), p. 34]
Paintings

Lewis used bright colours in her paintings, and her subjects were often flowers or animals, including oxen teams, horses, birds, deer, and cats. Many of her paintings are of outdoor scenes, including Cape Island boats bobbing on the water, horses pulling a sleigh, skaters, and portraits of dogs, cats, deer, birds, and cows. Her paintings were inspired by childhood memories of the landscape and people around
Yarmouth and South Ohio, as well as Digby locations such as
Point Prim and Bayview. Commercial Christmas cards and calendars also influenced her.
Lewis returned to the same subjects again and again, each time painting them slightly differently. For instance, she made dozens, if not hundreds, of images of cats over the course of her career. The serial nature of her practice was partly motivated by customer demand; she repeated compositions that sold well while discarding less popular ones. “I put the same things in, I never change,” she said of her style on the
CBC CBC may refer to:
Media
* Cadena Baja California or Grupo Cadena, a radio and television broadcaster in Mexico
* Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Canada's radio and television public broadcaster
** CBC Television
** CBC Radio One
** CBC Music
** ...
program Telescope in 1965. “Same colours and same designs.”
Many of her paintings are quite small, no larger than eight by ten inches, although she is known to have done at least five paintings that are 24 inches by 36 inches. For several years, Everett cut the boards for the paintings to size, although near the end of her career she was purchasing Masonite pre-cut to set dimensions.
The size of her paintings was limited by the extent she could move her arms, which were affected by arthritis. She used mostly wallboard and tubes of Tinsol, an oil-based paint. Her technique consisted of first coating the board with white, then drawing an outline, and applying paint directly out of the tube. She never blended or mixed colours.
Early Maud Lewis paintings from the 1940s are quite rare. A large collection of Lewis' work can be found in the
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial museums of Canada, provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up ...
(AGNS). It occasionally displays the Chaplin/Wennerstrom shutters (now part of the Clearwater Fine Foods Inc. collection) comprising 22 exterior house shutters Lewis painted in the early 1940s for some Americans who owned a cottage on the
South Shore. Most of the shutters are quite large, at 5 ft x 1 ft.6 inches. Lewis was paid 70 cents a shutter.
Between 1945 and 1950, people began to stop at Lewis' Marshalltown home on
Highway No. 1, Nova Scotia's main highway and tourist route, buying her paintings for two or three dollars each. Only in the last three or four years of her life did Lewis' paintings begin to sell for seven to ten dollars. She achieved national attention as a folk artist following an article in the Toronto-based ''
Star Weekly
The ''Star Weekly'' magazine was a Canadian periodical published from 1910 until 1973. The publication was read widely in rural Canada where delivery of daily newspapers was infrequent.
History Formation
The newspaper was founded as the ''Toront ...
'' in 1964. In 1965, she was featured on CBC-TV's ''
Telescope
A telescope is a device used to observe distant objects by their emission, Absorption (electromagnetic radiation), absorption, or Reflection (physics), reflection of electromagnetic radiation. Originally, it was an optical instrument using len ...
''. Two of Lewis' paintings were ordered by the
White House
The White House is the official residence and workplace of the president of the United States. Located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest (Washington, D.C.), NW in Washington, D.C., it has served as the residence of every U.S. president ...
in the 1970s during
Richard Nixon
Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913April 22, 1994) was the 37th president of the United States, serving from 1969 until Resignation of Richard Nixon, his resignation in 1974. A member of the Republican Party (United States), Republican ...
's presidency. Her arthritis limited her ability to complete many of the orders that resulted from her national recognition.
Later life and death
In the last year of her life, Lewis stayed in one corner of her house, painting as often as she could while traveling back and forth to the hospital for treatment of health issues. She died in Digby on July 30, 1970, from pneumonia. Her husband Everett was killed in 1979 by a burglar during an attempted robbery of the house.
Legacy
House
After Everett Lewis' death, their painted house began to deteriorate. A group of concerned citizens from the Digby area started the Maud Lewis Painted House Society to save the landmark. In 1984, it was sold to the
Province of Nova Scotia and transferred to the care of the
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial museums of Canada, provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up ...
,
which restored the house and installed it as part of its permanent Lewis exhibit.
This inspiring story helped to sway the provincial and municipal government about the importance of an art museum for the city.
Every year, this attraction welcomes thousands of visitors from around the world and depicts her cheerful perseverance even in the face of physical and economic hardships.
A steel memorial sculpture based on the Lewis' house has been erected at the original homesite in Marshalltown, designed by architect
Brian MacKay-Lyons.
A replica of the Maud Lewis House was built in 1999 by retired fisherman Murray Ross, complete with finished interior. It is a few kilometres north of Marshalltown on the road to
Digby Neck
Digby Neck is a Canadian peninsula extending into the Bay of Fundy in Digby County, Nova Scotia.
Digby Neck is the western extension of the North Mountain range from the Annapolis Valley and is made of two thick lava flows. It is separated from ...
in Seabrook.
Postage stamps
Lewis was recognized as the provincial Heritage Day honouree for 2019, and a limited edition postage stamp featuring her art was released.
Canada Post
Canada Post Corporation (, trading as Canada Post (), is a Canadian Crown corporation that functions as the primary postal operator in Canada.
Originally known as Royal Mail Canada (the operating name of the Post Office Department of the Can ...
announced that Maud Lewis paintings would be featured on the 2020 Christmas and holiday postage stamps. Her paintings were featured on three stamps issued on November 2, 2020, at Digby, Nova Scotia. ''Family and Sled'' (ca. 1960s) appeared on the domestic-rate stamp. ''Team of Oxen in Winter'' (1967) was released with a face value of $1.30 (the rate for mail to the United States), and ''Winter Sleigh Ride'' (early 1960s) carried a face value of $2.71 (the first-class rate for mail to other international addresses). The stamps were issued as a gummed souvenir sheet set of three, and in three separate booklets of self-adhesive stamps.
Paintings sale prices
Lewis' paintings have sold at auction for ever increasing prices. On November 30, 2009, ''A Family Outing'' sold for C$22,200 at a Bonham's auction in Toronto. Another, ''A View of Sandy Cove'', sold in 2012 for C$20,400. A painting found in 2016 at an Ontario thrift store, ''Portrait of Eddie Barnes and Ed Murphy, Lobster Fishermen'', sold in an online auction for C$45,000. ''Black Truck'', depicting the eponymous vehicle driving on road bordered with flowers, sold at auction in Toronto for C$350,000 in May 2022.
Further reading and other media
The
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial museums of Canada, provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up ...
published "Our Maud: The Life, Art and Legacy of Maud Lewis" by
Ray Cronin in 2017. His ''Maud Lewis: Life & Work'' was published by the
Art Canada Institute
Art Canada Institute is a bilingual, non-profit research organization that aims to promote and support the study of Canadian art history. It has been described as “a comprehensive, multi-tiered, online-based resource for the general public on Can ...
in 2021. Cronin's "Nova Scotia Folk Art: An Illustrated Guide" (Nimbus) was published in 2024.
In 1976, the first of three documentaries produced by the
National Film Board of Canada
The National Film Board of Canada (NFB; ) is a Canadian public film and digital media producer and distributor. An agency of the Government of Canada, the NFB produces and distributes documentary films, animation, web documentaries, and altern ...
was released
''Maud Lewis: A World Without Shadows''was directed by
Diane Beaudry for the NFB's women's unit,
Studio D
Studio D was the women's unit of the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) and the world's first publicly funded feminist filmmaking studio. In its 22-year history, it produced over 140 films and won 3 Academy Awards. ''Cinema Canada'' once called ...
. Later films include
The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewis' (1998) based on a biography by
Lance Woolaver, and
I Can Make Art ... Like Maud Lewis' (2005). The latter is a short film in which a group of Grade 6 students are inspired by Lewis' work to create their own folk art painting.
In 2009, the
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS) is a public provincial museums of Canada, provincial art museum based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The art museum's primary building complex is located in downtown Halifax and takes up ...
, in conjunction with Greg Thompson Productions, produced a new play about Lewis at the AGNS. ''A Happy Heart: The Maud Lewis Story'' was written and produced by Greg Thompson, who produced ''Marilyn: Forever Blonde'' at the AGNS in January 2008. Thompson wrote the one-woman play about Lewis while in Nova Scotia in 2008. It ran until October 25, 2009.
Screenwriter
Sherry White
Sherry White is a Canadian screenwriter, television producer, director, and actress. She is best known for co-creating and executive producing the CBC Television comedy-drama series ''Pretty Hard Cases'', and for writing the 2016 film ''Maudie (fi ...
wrote ''
Maudie'', a feature dramatic film about Lewis that made its Canadian debut at the
2016 Toronto International Film Festival
The 41st annual Toronto International Film Festival was held from 8 to 18 September 2016. The first announcement of films to be screened at the festival took place on 26 July. Almost 400 films were shown.
Awards
The festival's final awards were ...
. Directed by
Aisling Walsh
Aisling Walsh (born 1958) is an Irish screenwriter and director. Her work has screened at festivals around the world and she has won several accolades, including a BAFTA TV Award for '' Room at the Top'' (2012) as well as an Irish Film and Tele ...
, it stars
Sally Hawkins
Sally Cecilia Hawkins (born 27 April 1976) is an English actress of stage and screen. She began her career on stage and then moved into film, for which she has received several accolades including a Golden Globe Award, in addition to nominatio ...
as Maud and
Ethan Hawke
Ethan Green Hawke (born November 6, 1970) is an American actor, author, and film director. He made his film debut in ''Explorers (film), Explorers'' (1985), before making a breakthrough performance in ''Dead Poets Society'' (1989). Hawke starr ...
as Everett.
The Russian-Canadian composer
Nikolai Korndof (1947-2001) wrote an orchestral piece ''The Smile of Maud Lewis'' (1998). It was recorded in a performance for orchestra, conducted by Leslie Dala, and released in 2022.
See also
*
Nova Scotia Heritage Day
In most provinces of Canada, the third Monday in February is observed as a regional statutory holiday, typically known in general as Family Day ()—though some provinces use their own names, as they celebrate the day for different reasons. The ...
References
External links
Maud Lewis: Life & Workby Ray Cronin, published by the Art Canada Institute
Halifax Art & Artists: An Illustrated Historyby Ray Cronin, published by the Art Canada Institute
*
Maud Lewis at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia'
*
', County Archives, archive.is
*
' on folkartcanada.ca (web.archive.org)
folkartcanada.ca-->
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lewis, Maud
1903 births
1970 deaths
People from Yarmouth County
People from Digby County, Nova Scotia
Folk artists
Artists from Nova Scotia
Canadian women painters
Canadian artists with disabilities
20th-century Canadian women artists
20th-century Canadian artists
20th-century Canadian painters
20th-century Canadian women painters
Canadian genre painters
Outsider artists