Canadian artist Maud Lewis lived in a tiny house covered in her paintings, which she sold door to door in Nova Scotia. A biopic of her life, Maudie, is a surprise hit in theaters, reports the BBC.
The film’s success has also been spurred by a rather serendipitous find: an unknown Maud Lewis painting found in a thrift shop is being auctioned off for charity, with bids topping C$125,000 ($91,500, £70,685). The work was authenticated by Mr Deacon, a retired school teacher who is now somewhat of a Maud Lewis sleuth. …
Typically characterised as a “folk artist”, Lewis was self-taught and lived her whole life in poverty. Unable to afford things like canvas, she’d paint on anything from scraps of wood and plywood to thick card stock. Her subjects were the things she saw in her everyday life – fishermen, wildlife, flowers and trees.
“Maud was not a person who travelled to other galleries or saw other art, so there’s a kind of naivete to it,” Noble told the BBC.
Here’s the trailer: