A singularly progressive force in Canadian modernism, Pegi Nicol MacLeod (1904–1949) was a painter whose exuberance boldly defied creative conventions. In an era when the Group of Seven’s pioneering vision still loomed large in Canadian art, her bold and avant-garde works pulsed with life and a fluidity of form and reflected a sensibility that privileged motion and immediacy. Working in the period between the women’s suffrage movement and second-wave feminism, MacLeod carved out space in a male-dominated field by navigating and subverting the constraints placed upon women artists.
In Pegi Nicol MacLeod: Life & Work, author Devon Smither traces the artist’s remarkable career trajectory, revealing how MacLeod’s intuitive brushwork and layered compositions secured her place among Canada’s most forward-looking modernists. Born in Listowel, Ontario, and raised in Ottawa, MacLeod moved frequently throughout her life, including to Toronto, Fredericton, and New York. During the Second World War, she was commissioned to create artworks as part of the Canadian War Records program. Between 1944 and 1945, she produced a vivid series depicting members of the Canadian Women’s Army Corps as they trained, worked, and lived together. Animated by her kinetic style, the paintings capture the daily rhythms and camaraderie of the women serving on the home front.
“MacLeod’s so-called unfinished brushwork was her declaration of freedom. What critics saw as haste was, in truth, velocity—ideas made visible. Her rhythmic, spontaneous style challenged polite Canadian painting and proved that speed, emotion, and audacity could be marks of mastery.”
Devon Smither
Alongside her contemporaries, including artists Marian Dale Scott and Paraskeva Clark, MacLeod forged a modern visual language through self-portraiture, images of childhood, and dynamic scenes of urban life. Though her life was cut short at the age of forty-five, MacLeod’s paintings remain luminous with the vitality of their maker—alive with colour and the unceasing energy of an artist who saw the world as ever in motion.
About the Author
Devon Smither is associate professor of art history and museum studies at the University of Lethbridge. Her research examines how art and visual culture have shaped ideas of Canada, with a focus on modern art, nation-building, women artists, and gender bias in art historiography. Her current project funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Parallel: The History and Archives of Artist-Run Centres in Canada, analyzes artist-run centres as a distinctive Canadian cultural model shaped by equity-driven practices, experimentation, and regional networks. She is a founding member of Open Art Histories and the Prairie Art Network. Smither is also co-author of CanadARThistories: Reimagining the Canadian Art History Survey (2022), the first open educational resource on Canadian and Indigenous art histories. She has published in RACAR: Canadian Art Review, the Journal of Historical Sociology (now Sociology Lens), and the Literary Review of Canada. She holds a PhD from the University of Toronto.