‘A piece of history’: Banting painting depicts lab where insulin was discovered
TORONTO — A painting up for auction provides an intimate look at the site of one of the most important medical discoveries of the 20th century — as rendered by one of its discoverers.
For most, Frederick Banting is best known as the Nobel Prize-winning Canadian physician whose research alongside medical student Charles Best led to the 1921 discovery of insulin, which revolutionized the treatment of diabetes.
But in artistic circles, Banting is also recognized for his prowess as a landcape painter, earning him the friendship of the Group of Seven’s A.Y. Jackson, as well as posthumous success on the auction market.
These dual identities converge in “The Lab,” which experts say is Banting’s only known portrayal of an interior scene. The painting conveys the artist’s singular perspective on the scientific setting that would define his life, while saving perhaps millions of others.


