The Beaver Hall Group was a
Montreal-based group of
Canadian painters who met in late 1910 while studying art at a school run by the
Art Association of Montreal.
Nora Collyer,
Emily Coonan, Prudence Heward,
Mabel Lockerby,
Mabel May,
Kathleen Morris,
Lilias Torrance Newton, Sarah Robertson,
Anne Savage and
Ethel Seath were part of this group, sometimes known the Beaver Hall Hill Group or Beaver Hall Women. This association of nineteen Montreal artists, eight of whom were women, had been committed to developing distinctive artistic visions while acknowledging the influence of the
Group of Seven, and French modernism. The Beaver Hall artists held their annual exhibition at their studios on Beaver Hall Hill. By the end of 1921, the Beaver Hall group ran into serious financial difficulties which necessitated relinquishing their studios. The men went their own way, but most of the women remained in close touch with each other. In the summers, Robertson would also visit Prudence Heward at her family's summer home near
Brockville on the
St. Lawrence River. At the same time, Robertson also maintained a long correspondence with
A.Y. Jackson, who offered vital critical judgment. Jackson was a close friend of both Robertson and Heward. Some of Robertson’s paintings were inspired by her visits to the Hewards' summer home. Robertson was a founding member of the
Canadian Group of Painters, exhibiting with them for many years. The group was made up of 28 different English-speaking painters from across Canada. This group was instrumental in establishing a new direction for Canadian art, expressing the diversity of the Canadian experience of landscapes and buildings based on the vision of the Group of Seven. ==Exhibitions and collections==