Jack Bush occupies a central position in the history of postwar Canadian abstraction. Although his early artistic formation included study with J.E.H. MacDonald of the Group of Seven, Bush ultimately moved beyond the conventions of landscape painting, pursuing an increasingly autonomous visual language grounded in colour, scale, and formal clarity. During the 1930s he balanced commercial work as a graphic designer with evening studies at the Ontario College of Art, an experience that cultivated the disciplined sense of composition evident throughout his mature practice. Bush's artistic development accelerated through sustained contact with the New York art world during the 1950s and 1960s. As a member of Painters Eleven, he contributed to the emergence of abstract painting in Canada while engaging with the innovations of American Abstract Expressionism. The encouragement of critic Clement Greenberg proved especially significant, prompting Bush to simplify his compositions and intensify his attention to the expressive capacity of colour. These exchanges positioned his work within the broader discourse of Color Field painting and Lyrical Abstraction, even as his paintings retained a distinctly personal sensibility.