Kitchener-Waterloo

Online auction of Maud Lewis painting found in thrift store opens

An auction for a painting that was dropped off at a southern Ontario thrift shop and turned out to be painted by Nova Scotia folk artist Maud Lewis is opening Thursday night.

'we continue to be greatful' says MCC spokesman

This Maud Lewis painting was discovered by volunteers at the Mennonite Central Committee Thrift Centre in New Hamburg, Ont. The painting will be auctioned off to support the MCC. (Ken Ogasawara/MCC Photo)

The Maud Lewis painting that turned up in a New Hamburg, Ont. thrift shop last month is going to be auctioned off to support the Mennonite Central Committee.

The online auction starts Thursday, April 20 at 9:00 p.m. and runs until May 19, at 9:00 p.m.

The painting, called Portrait of Eddie Barnes and Ed Murphy, Lobster Fisherman, Bay View, N.S., was spotted by volunteers combing through donations. 

Rick Cober Bauman, the executive director of the Mennonite Central Committee, said they have learned a lot about the artist's world since the painting was found.

"Her doctor has come forward and people who are related to the guy in the painting. So we're hoping now that people take a seriously look at this as well," Cober Bauman said.

They have no sense of who donated the painting.

But Cober Bauman said there is a moving link to how her work will make a difference.

"Here's a woman, a painter, who really lived in poverty," Cober Bauman said. "These paintings sold for $2 and $3 apiece and now ... [the] gift of her work is coming back to be, in many ways, a response to poverty again."  

The painting will be on view from April 21 to May 19 at the Homer Watson House and Gallery in Kitchener.