The Cab Stand, Place d'Armes
Robert Pilot perpetuated the Impressionist tradition throughout his artistic career. Having learned from Maurice Cullen, his father-in-law, Pilot was able to master winter landscape painting just like his master.
Unliked the Group of Seven who sought to paint remote Canadian lands, Pilot was drawn to the way of life and human activity. A solitary man, he was content with his work while avoiding a precise artistic approach. Besides, he was not in favour of art theories and even critics. He will say :Art critics confuse everything. They speak a language that painters often don’t understand. All painters needed, he added, was a palette, a few brushes, and some tube of colours’’: quote from Impressionism in Canada, a journey of rediscovery by A. K. Prakash, referred at Chauvin p 45-46, page 632.
Selling and buying artworks by Canadian artist Robert Pilot. Contact our art galleries to buy or sell art by Robert Pilot.
PAINTING OF ROBERT PILOT FOR SALE?
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
The Cab Stand, Place d'Armes
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Gallery
Cosner Art Gallery Ritz - Carlton Montreal
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Medium
Oil on panel
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Time
Fine Canadian Art
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Dimensions
34,3 x 47 cm | 13,5'' x 18,5''
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Dimensions with frame
57 x 69,8 cm | 22,5" x 27,5''
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Signed
Signed lower right
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
Early Spring in Quebec Village , 1965
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
The Cab Stand, Place d'Armes
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
View from Whitehall Court, London, Engl, 1962
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
Winter Village, 1936
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
Untitled (Winter landscape)
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
English Winter, 1942
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
The citadelle from Levis, 1949
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
Sunset, Apple Blossoms
Robert W. Pilot (1898 - 1967)
Farm in Winter, 1912