William Goodridge Roberts
(1904 - 1974) Canadian Group of Painters, RCA
Artwork from the 1940s
WILLIAM GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
Young Girl
pastel
signed lower left; titled and dated 1942 to the gallery label on the reverse
29 x 21 ins ( 73.7 x 53.3 cms ) ( sight )
WILLIAM GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
Country Road
watercolour
signed and dated “June 1945” lower right
15 x 19 ins ( 38.1 x 48.3 cms ) ( sight )
Auction Estimate: $2,000.00 - $3,000.00
Price Realized $2,070.00
Sale date: May 25th 2017
WILLIAM GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
Nursery Fantasy No.1
pencil and gouache
signed lower right; titled and dated 1945 on an exhibition label on the reverse
22 x 28.75 ins ( 55.9 x 73 cms ) ( sight )
WILLIAM GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
Cyclamen on Table
oil on canvas
signed lower right; titled on labels on the reverse
38 x 30.25 ins ( 96.5 x 76.8 cms )
Auction Estimate: $12,000.00 - $15,000.00
Price Realized $15,600.00
Sale date: November 22nd 2021
WILLIAM GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
Lake Orford
watercolour
signed lower right; titled and dated c. 1945 to two gallery labels on the reverse
13.75 x 23.25 ins ( 34.9 x 59.1 cms ) ( sight )
Consignments
We are currently seeking works by Goodridge Roberts to be included in future consignment sales.
If you are interested in selling works by William Goodridge Roberts or want to get our opinion of value click here for more information or submit your artwork for sale.
Goodridge Roberts Biography
(1904 - 1974) Canadian Group of Painters, RCA
Roberts was born in Barbados in 1904 to a prominent Canadian literary family. His father, Theodore, was a poet, novelist, and journalist. Roberts began his studies at Montreal's Ecole des Beaux-Arts but, encouraged by his art-critic aunt, Mary Fanton Roberts, he enrolled at New York's Art Students League. His New York schooling would prove to be a major influence on his career.
During the 1930s, Roberts lived, painted, and taught in Ontario. He was the very first artist-in-residence at Queens University in Kingston. Refusing to incorporate nationalist content into his work, Roberts became recognized for his modernist approach. In the 1940s, Roberts moved to Montreal and continued painting and teaching. He was admired by Quebec's francophone art community who saw in his work a reflection of the modernist figurative tradition from France, known in Montreal as "living art." His works were equally divided into the themes of landscapes, portraits and still lifes; all are textbook examples of each style. The artist's last major retrospective was held at the National Gallery of Canada in 1969. He died in January 1974.