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Anna T. Noëh

Anna Noëh (1926–2011, Hungary) studied at the Academy of Applied Arts in Budapest, where she pioneered wood-batik mural design, before continuing studies in Vienna and later settling in Montreal. Fascinated by Inuit culture, she travelled extensively in the Canadian Arctic, creating paintings and drawings that sensitively document daily life. Working primarily in acrylic but also in oil, graphite, and watercolour, Noëh combined technical precision with a profound ethnographic vision.

Anna T. Noëh

Anna Noëh (1926–2011, Hungary) studied at the Academy of Applied Arts in Budapest, where she pioneered wood-batik mural design, before continuing studies in Vienna and later settling in Montreal. Fascinated by Inuit culture, she travelled extensively in the Canadian Arctic, creating paintings and drawings that sensitively document daily life. Working primarily in acrylic but also in oil, graphite, and watercolour, Noëh combined technical precision with a profound ethnographic vision.Anna Noeh (1926–2011, Hungary) studied mural design and painting at the Academy of Applied Arts in Budapest, where she pioneered the medium of wood-batik murals and won several prizes for her innovation. In 1956 she attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna on a Rockefeller Foundation scholarship before immigrating to Canada the following year, settling in Montreal. While she worked in a variety of media including oil, acrylic, watercolour, graphite, and pencil, Noeh became best known for her depictions of Inuit daily life in the Canadian Arctic.

She travelled extensively in Northern Canada, recording her observations through sketches and paintings that combined ethnographic accuracy with a refined artistic sensibility. Her work has been described as both cultural documentation and contemporary art, bridging anthropological insight with painterly vision. Exhibited widely, including at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, her oeuvre remains an important contribution to Canadian art.