Claude Breeze

[2] These fourteen paintings in the series have naked figures in some sort of combination to strip the skin off the sick 1960s, the artist said.

[3] His Sunday Afternoon (from an old American Photograph) (1965, Department of External Affairs Collection) was featured in the first issue of arts/canada in January 1967 by editor Barry Lord.

[2] In painting it, Breeze was inspired by a photograph in a University of British Columbia newspaper, The Ubyssey, of a lynching in the United States.

In the early 1980s, Breeze`s love of martial arts and the orient led to a series of paintings and lithographs.

Among his works are several pieces of public art, including Spacing... Aerial Highways, a 300-foot ceramic tile mural at Lawrence West subway station in Toronto.