Rob MacArthur Art Collections
Shop for artwork from Rob MacArthur based on themed collections. Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Artwork by Rob MacArthur
Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
de Havilland Beaver touching down by Rob MacArthur
Summer clouds by Rob MacArthur
Blackstone River, Yukon by Rob MacArthur
Storm clouds building by Rob MacArthur
Autumn Highlights, Stamp River by Rob MacArthur
Deep in the Forest by Rob MacArthur
Autumn mosaic by Rob MacArthur
Rock Face with Birches by Rob MacArthur
Breaking Trail II, Assiniboine Forest by Rob MacArthur
Through the trees by Rob MacArthur
Autumn Vista, Tombstone by Rob MacArthur
Splash of colour by Rob MacArthur
Winter Birches by Rob MacArthur
Below the Rapids, Rushing River by Rob MacArthur
First Glimpse of Spring by Rob MacArthur
Ebb and Flow, Ucluelet by Rob MacArthur
Clearing Skies by Rob MacArthur
Autumn Glow, Island Lake by Rob MacArthur
Sunset at the Beaver Pond by Rob MacArthur
Beating the storm--Norseman taxiing out for takeoff by Rob MacArthur
Rushing River by Rob MacArthur
Northern Lake by Rob MacArthur
Grasslands by Rob MacArthur
Lower rapids Rushing River by Rob MacArthur
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About Rob MacArthur
Art has been an essential part of my being for as long as I can remember, and is deeply rooted in my lifelong connection with the natural world. A zoologist by training, I spent my professional life as a university professor, a career path that left little time for artistic pursuits. On those occasions when I did find the opportunity to paint or do photography, the experiences were both humbling and deeply gratifying, providing creative outlets that I have been privileged to continue into retirement.
The son of a bush pilot, I had the good fortune growing up to see and travel northern boreal landscapes. My field studies of wildlife also immersed me in the natural beauty of wild places, be they beaver ponds in boreal forest, spruce bogs, alpine meadows, or prairie marshes. For several years I have owned a cottage in northwestern Ontario and much of my artwork is inspired by the scenery nearby. Living as I do in Winnipeg, Manitoba, also provides me access to the expansive skies and brilliant winter light of the Canadian prairies.
Bold, expressive colours and direct, freely applied brush or knife work excite me most, and I have long-admired the works of late 19th- early 20th-century impressionists and post-impressionists. Among Canadian painters, the strongest influence has been Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. As a youth living in Dawson City, Yukon in the early 1960s, I was fortunate to hear an informal presentation given by A.Y. Jackson to my high school class during one of his last fall sketching trips to the Canadian north. My only recollection of that talk was his effusive charm and heartfelt passion for painting the Canadian landscape, and the take-away message that painting was a wonderful pastime everyone should try. As if to underscore his point, the following morning found A.Y. perched on a boulder at the edge of town, hunched over his sketch box, totally absorbed in the plein air experience.
I am a self-taught artist and though I have always painted in oils, in recent years I have transitioned to the painting knife as my tool of choice. At some point, I came to realize that the knife stroke imparted a purity and brilliance of colour to my work that I simply could not achieve in any other way. Because I generally work with pure, undiluted paint straight from the tube, there is a three-dimensional, sculpted quality to knife painting that I find harmonizes perfectly with the rugged Precambrian Shield landscape that I often paint.