Red Covered Bridge Christmas Card
More Works By Maud Lewis Watercolour 1961
4.5 × 6.75 in
11.43 × 17.15 cm
FRAMED
11.5 × 14.5 in
29.21 × 36.83 cm
About Red Covered Bridge Christmas Card
This rare watercolour folk art painting was one of a series of Christmas cards created by Maud Lewis.Maud Lewis’s fanciful artwork has captured the imagination of audiences around the world. Her simple, almost child-like paintings full of colour and charm visualize the essence of rural life in Nova Scotia. She was never formally trained as an artist but as a young child used to paint Christmas cards with her mother. Importantly, this is one of several cards showcased in the 1997 travelling exhibition, ‘The Illuminated Life of Maud Lewi. It is still in the cherrywood frames from that exhibition and is considered very special for that reason. This card—a wintery scene with a horse-drawn sleigh entering a covered bridge was originally painted by the adult Maud and bought directly from the artist in 1961 by a family in Yarmouth. (A family letter accompanies the card)
The bright yellow and green sleigh with two people inside is travelling away from the viewer towards the red-covered bridge that crosses a river, the snow-covered fields, and a line of evergreens in the background. Lewis loved the colour and this little painting is no exception rendered in a vivid palette of yellow, green, red, blue, black, brown, and crisp white. Lewis’s happy paintings belied the hard impoverished life she led—she suffered from crippling arthritis that twisted her fingers and made it difficult to hold a paintbrush.
A prolific artist, Maud Lewis painted the world she recalled—flowers, cats, fishermen, boats, farmhouses, oxen, and the countryside in all seasons. She also famously painted everything—every surface of her house—from coffee cans to dust pans, stairs, windows, walls and the front door.
“As long as I’ve got a brush in front of me, I’m alright.” Maud Lewis
Maud Lewis was born in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia in 1901. As an adult, she sold paintings from the house she shared with her husband for five dollars each. Lewis died at age 69. The little one room house was restored and is on permanent exhibit at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia. Her artwork is held there and in the Canadian Museum of Civilization. Maud Lewis is the subject of several biographies and two National Film Board of Canada documentaries. In 2017, a biopic of Maud's life titled "Maudie" was released starring Sally Hawkins and Ethan Hawke.