Eleven Painters Start a War: The Story of a Group of Abstract Painters
By (Author) Tom Smart
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
29th July 2026
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Individual architects and architectural firms
Individual artists, art monographs
Biography: general
History of art
Hardback
469
Width 165mm, Height 228mm
By the early 1950s, art societies and academies held a tight grip on what could and could not be shown in their annual public exhibitions. Their juries were conservative tastemakers and rabid anti-modernists. Abstract art was rarely selected for display, thus robbing innovative painters of opportunities to have their work seen, reviewed, and purchased. With no outlets to show their art, ambitious, impatient painters sought alternative exhibition venues as a means of advocating for changes in the status quo.
In Eleven Painters Start a War, Tom Smart tells the story of the "Painters Eleven," a group of abstract painters whose anti-establishment ethos was defined by a respect for diversity, creative freedom, abstraction, and contempt for aesthetic complacency. He charts their paths through the 1950s and early 60s as they fight for the acceptance of abstract painting in Canadian art galleries, the critical press, and in the public imagination. Through their interactions and steadfast belief in the promise of abstract art to contribute to a better society, the Painters Eleven managed to change attitudes toward this new way of painting, but not without facing the vitriol of the art establishment who accused them of "starting a war."
Author, art gallery director, curator, and consultant, Tom Smart has written award-winning, critical biographies, catalogues, and books as well as curated exhibitions on Canadian and international artists, including painters Mary Pratt, Christopher Pratt, James Simon Mishibinijima, Alex Colville, Tom Forrestall, graphic novelists Seth, George Walker, and many others. He has worked in art galleries and museums across Canada and the United States among them the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, the Frick Pittsburgh, the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, and the Winnipeg Art Gallery. He has lectured at universities in Canada and the United States and was a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Carnegie Mellon University.