Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

About

Wilf Perreault

Wilf Perreault has been described as one of the most interesting of Canada’s contemporary landscape painters. Born in ALBERTVILLE, he took private art lessons as a child. His formal training began at the UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN, where his concern for representational painting was at odds with the New York-style abstraction dominant at that time in Saskatchewan. He concentrated instead on abstract sculpture under the guidance of OTTO ROGERS and BILL EPP. He also encountered the landscape paintings of RETA COWLEY and DOROTHY KNOWLES, whose expressive play with light in the landscape would later serve as an influence. Perreault graduated with a BFA in 1970 and a BEd in 1971, and moved to Regina to teach art. There he returned to painting, and his explorations of his new city became linked with his search for a subject matter. Perreault eschewed the conventional views, becoming fascinated instead with the complex vistas to be found in the back lanes of the inner city. These hidden landscapes have sustained his interest throughout his career, providing an ongoing challenge to his skills in creating works that capture the play of light and reflection, evoking a human context that saturates his work with a sense of place. He developed an exacting method to capture the reflections in his often water- or snow-covered alleys. In layer after layer of thin washes, colour is used in precise brushstrokes to achieve paintings that are masterful renderings of texture and compositional elements and, above all, of light.