Wacko went on to study art at the Central Technical School’s Art Centre in Toronto, where McCarthy taught classes in art history and still life. In 1977, a chance encounter with McCarthy on a flight to Alberta led Wacko to invite the older artist to paint with her in Jasper. “She was curious about everything,” says Wacko. That first painting trip sparked a decades-long friendship. During that time, Wacko collected McCarthy’s art and helped produce a documentary on her life.
Taught by Group of Seven member Arthur Lismer, McCarthy was known for her paintings of Canadian landscapes, especially in the Arctic, around Georgian Bay, and Alberta’s Badlands. Like the Group of Seven, she took an outdoor approach to painting, hiking into the wilderness, sometimes in cold or rugged conditions, to capture the scenery around her. “The only way landscape painters get better is if they work outside,” Wacko says. “A lot of painters try to regurgitate photos. But I hear her voice saying, ‘Talk about it, don’t copy it.’”
A member of the Order of Canada, McCarthy died in 2010, four months after her 100th birthday.
In 2019, Wacko purchased more than 600 items from McCarthy’s estate, including paintings, sketches, journals and notebooks. Earlier this year, she donated 180 of the works, valued at $1.5 million, to the Doris McCarthy Gallery, which in 2024 marks its 20th anniversary.