Lawren Harris: Houses in Winter

By: Alec Blair, Director of the Lawren Harris Inventory Project

Lot 316 – Lawren Stewart Harris (1885-1970), Canadian
HOUSES IN WINTER, CA. 1920
Estimate: $150,000—250,000

Houses in Winter is an atmospheric and sensitive painting, evoking the cold quiet of winter in Toronto. Capturing the muted stillness and tranquility of dusk, it is a fine example of Harris’ practice of sketching outdoors, translating his observations of the environment directly onto a wooden panel.

Likely painted around 1920 in the rapidly expanded neighbourhoods of either Earlscourt or Lambton in western Toronto, this sketch comes from Harris’ broad catalogue of urban scenes, a subject of fascination for the artist in the years around the formation of the Group of Seven. This enthusiasm for Toronto itself as a subject set him somewhat apart from his fellow members, but is completely in line with his broader vision for creating a body of work that Canadians could identify with and relate directly to.

In a description of his early urban subjects, Harris commented in 1926 that they were “the natural expression of a love for homely subjects with their roots firmly fixed in the everyday life of all Canadians.” [1] Sketches of urban subjects, like those that depicted northern lakes and forests, were an avenue he saw to expand the country’s interest and identity in art. Quoted in his friend F.B. Housser’s book, A Canadian Art Movement, Harris wrote that one of the ways of interesting oneself in art was “…the way of life. This way demands an interest in what is being done to-day in our midst; the furthering of all original expression in one’s own community. It requires a perspective that relates near and distant happenings and brings all findings to bear fruit here and now […] It sees that life is creative, and that people only live when they create, and that all other activities should be a means to creation.”[2]

Alec Blair, director of the Lawren S. Harris Inventory Project, with HOUSES IN WINTER

In another piece, written in 1913 under a pseudonym, Harris describes the artist’s purpose in depicting commonplace city scenes as such: “Through his pictures we, whose specialities are of a more practical sort, are led to see the inward beauty of the subject.”[3] These ideas are linked together by a belief that, for both artists and audiences, there is great importance in the connection between lived experiences, one’s surroundings, and the art that these contexts can inspire and reflect. This sentiment was at the core of Harris’ mission for the Group of Seven, creating a particularly Canadian artistic movement that celebrated its own identity and environment.

This peaceful sketch portrays the everyday beauty that was as much a part of Harris’ early artistic mission as his wilderness subjects, and its confident execution speaks to Harris’ familiarity with the scene and a deftness of skill needed to paint quickly in the evening cold. The subdued palette and madder-toned underpainting provide a cohesive harmony to the composition, with the subtle yellows, greens, and greys of the houses catching the eye, painted with the appropriate restraint to convey the fading of colour of the scene’s low light. As in so many of his works, through this sketch Harris provides the audience a window into a moment of Canadian life, and through his artist’s eye, guides us to realize an appreciation of the serene beauty found there.

We thank Alec Blair for this essay. Blair is the director of the Lawren S. Harris Inventory Project, working with the estate of the artist to create a catalogue of the artist’s works. 

[1] Lawren Harris quoted in Fred Housser, A Canadian Art Movement: The Story of the Group of Seven, Toronto: Macmillan Company of Canada Limited, 1926, p 36.
[2] Lawren Harris quoted in Fred Housser, A Canadian Art Movement: The Story of the Group of Seven, Toronto: Macmillan Company of Canada Limited, 1926, p 42.
[3] Dewar Montague, “The Classic Commonplace”, MacLeans Magazine (May 1913), p 39.

We are pleased to offer Houses in Winter in our Major Canadian and International Fine Art auction, online November 7 – 20, 2025.

About the Auction

Our major fall Fine Art auction includes important works by Group of Seven artists Lawren Harris, A.J. Casson, J.E.H. MacDonald, and A.Y. Jackson, a rare Jock Macdonald abstract, early Kazuo Nakamura paintings, Louis-Philippe Hébert’s major sculpture Algonquins, as well as striking works by Sorel Etrog and Walter Yarwood. International highlights include two exceptionally rare sketches by Sir Edward John Poynter for the Maison Dieu’s stained-glass windows in Dover, Alexander Calder’s Red Serpent, along with works by David Diao, Jules Olitski, and Gene Davis.

Bidding Available November 7 – 20, 2025.

View the Online Gallery

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Previews are available at our Toronto gallery, located at 100 Broadview Avenue.

Thursday, November 13 from 10 am to 5 pm
Friday, November 14 from 10 am to 5 pm
Saturday, November 15 from 12 pm to 4 pm
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Wednesday, November 19 from 9 am to 12 pm
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