Sydney Strickland Tully
Sydney Strickland Tully was a Canadian painter. She is known for her pastel and oil portraits, landscapes and genre pictures, and for her success in a number of exhibitions. Tully kept a studio in Toronto from 1888 until her death. Her major works include The Twilight of Life, an oil painting in the collection of the Art Gallery of Ontario.
Biography
Sydney Strickland Tully was born and raised in Toronto, the child of Maria Strickland and Kivas Tully. Maria Strickland was a niece of Susanna Moodie and Kivas Tully was a prominent architect. Tully's sister, Louise Beresford Tully, was also a Toronto-based artist who operated a Yonge Street Arcade-based teaching studio Tully's early studies took place at the Central Ontario School of Art, Toronto, with Charlotte Schreiber and William Cruikshank. In 1884 she went to London to continue her education at the Slade School of Art, where she studied with Alphonse Legros. Further studies took place in Paris at the Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi. Later studies took place at the Long Island Art School with William Merritt Chase. Sydney Strickland Tully died on July 18, 1911, in Toronto, of pernicious anemia.Career
Tully began her career colouring photographs and designing Christmas cards, and she worked with a variety of mediums including oil and pastel. She later became well known for her landscapes, genre-scenes and portraits. Tully kept a studio in Toronto, where she taught regular classes, and participated steadily in the artistic life of the city. She also travelled internationally to paint and to participate in exhibitions, including sojourns in London, the Netherlands and the Jersey Channel Islands. Tully wrote articles for The Globe on European affairs, and she illustrated a children's book which was published after her death in 1911.Major collections
Tully's work is in the collections of the Art Gallery of Ontario, National Gallery of Canada, Museum London,and Government of Ontario.