Alexander Docks by Robert Bruce

Alexander Docks

Robert Bruce
circa 1959 Oil
30.5 x 49.5
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Robert Bruce

1911 - 1981
 
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The influential Western Canadian artist Robert Bruce (1911-1980) was born in Grandview, Manitoba and grew up in Winnipeg. As a young man he attended the Winnipeg School of Art under L.L. Fitzgerald. With the help of a bursary he later traveled to Europe, studying at the Central School of Art in London and the Academie Grande Chaumière in France. Like other artists of his generation he wished to help in the war effort and enlisted in the Canadian Military. He distinguished himself as a public relations staff artist, participating in a prestigious war art exhibition which opened at the National Gallery of Canada.

Following his discharge from the army he moved to New York to work and study at the Art Student's League. There he met fellow student George Swinton with whom he would later teach at the University of Manitoba School of Art. While in New York his illustrations were published in leading publications such as Life, The New York Times, Harpers, and McLean's.

After his retirement from the UofM in 1976 he divided his time between Falcon Lake and San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, which had an active artists' enclave. He died there in 1980. Robert Bruce was posthumously honoured by the Winnipeg Art Gallery in 2004 with an exhibition called The Art of Robert Bruce.