Maryon Kantaroff


Maryon Kantaroff was a Canadian sculptor known for her large-scale outdoor sculptures in bronze and other materials.

Early life and education

Kantaroff was born in Toronto, the child of Bulgarian parents. She studied piano at the Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto and earned a degree in art and archaeology from the University of Toronto in 1957. In 1957–1958 she worked as an assistant curator at the Art Gallery of Ontario. She traveled to London for postgraduate studies in American Ethnology at the British Museum and remained in England for several years, studying with Eric Stanford at Reading College. Her further studies took place at the Sir John Cass College of Art, the Society of Portrait Sculptors and the Chelsea College of Arts.

Career and impact

Kantaroff worked in a variety of materials including bronze, stone, metal and fiberglass. In 1962 she had her first solo exhibition at the Temple Gallery, London. She returned to Toronto for an exhibition at Toronto City Hall in 1968 and soon thereafter began an association with Galerie Dresdnere, which represented her through the early 1970s. In 1974, frustrated at the lack of a local foundry with capacity for casting her larger works, Kantaroff purchased the Toronto Arts Foundry in partnership with Al Green. She exhibited extensively in Canada and abroad in England, Europe, and the United States. A major retrospective of her work was held at the Wade Gallery, Los Angeles.
Her outdoor commissioned sculptures can be seen at J.D.S. Investments, Sheridan Mall, Mississauga the Baycrest, Toronto and the Windsor Sculpture Garden. She was a member of the Sculptors Society of Canada from 2004 on. Kantaroff was represented by the Kinsman Robinson Galleries, Toronto.
Maryon Kantaroff died in Toronto on June 9, 2019, of complications from pneumonia. She was 85.

Selected works

Cordella, Odette Sculpture Park, Windsor, OntarioThe Garden, Odette Sculpture Park, WindsorCounterpoint, Don Mills Road, TorontoGreenwin, Al Green Sculpture Park, TorontoSong of Deborah, Baycrest Hospital, TorontoFrederic C. Gans Memorial, University Avenue, TorontoAnodyomene, University of Toronto, Toronto

Awards and honours

In 1992 the artist received the prestigious President's Award of the Sculptors Society of Canada.