I am delighted to see this long 
                          overdue publication of Maurice Haycock’s remarkable 
                          Arctic paintings. Inspired by AY Jackson to portray 
                          the Canadian Arctic, Haycock’s paintings and writings 
                          offer us the rare opportunity to glimpse a pioneer’s 
                          journey through the Arctic Landscape.
                          Doris McCarthy, Canadian Artist
                        Some of the most important and 
                          dramatic stories of the Arctic region are presented 
                          here by a master storyteller – one of the most 
                          reliable, discerning, sensitive and thought-provoking 
                          interpreters of Arctic landscapes and Arctic history 
                          of our time…No one has captured the feeling, and 
                          the settings in which important events of the human 
                          history of the Canadian Arctic have been played out, 
                          as well as Maurice Haycock.
                          E. F. Roots, Scientist, Department 
                          of Environment, Canada
                        His paintings contain a sense of 
                          life, a vitality that transcends the muted colours of 
                          the Arctic landscape. He has captured a part of Canada 
                          that few of us ever see. His landscapes, seascapes and 
                          icescapes surge across the canvas to give is striking 
                          views of a hostile land. A land through which he travelled 
                          with comfort, familiarity and self assurance.
                          Joe MacInnis, Scientist and Deep-Sea 
                          Explorer
                        Haycock’s striking paintings 
                          of the historic sites bring to life the exploration 
                          of the Canadian Arctic and the search for the Franklin 
                          expedition, and his words bring us back to those days 
                          – in his own lifetime – when the Canadian 
                          Arctic was still barely touched by those who ventured 
                          from the South.
                          William Barr, Arctic Institute 
                          of North America