Regardless, the works she created were never devoid of emotion and power. Working through the end of Post Impressionist influences into a modernist, at times surrealist feel, she holds a valued place in Canadian art. Usually 'Monday Morning Art' starts with a bit of mystery, and a 'can you guess this artist' query. Not much challenge at guessing this artist.

This image at left is her "Above the Gravel Pit" from 1937. A bit strange that this piece is so similar to a Vincent work, that late in her painting career. Would have expected that much earlier, perhaps while she studied in France?
Getting ahead of myself, perhaps. Let's look at her life in painting.

Carr returns to Canada permanently in 1911.

An interesting element of her depictions of the aboriginal presence in the landscape is how the totem poles and villages appear to fit into their environs. There's a sense of harmony, for example in this piece " Totem Walk at Sitka" (1907) where the totem poles alternate with tree trunks along the forest path.
The totem poles among a village at "Gitwangak, Queen Charlotte Islands" (1912) depicts the figures of the carved totems in harmony with the residents of the space, under a living sky, in vibrant colours clearly influenced by the post impressionist perspective.

When people showed little enthusiasm for her modernist-leaning pieces, she mostly gave up painting for a time, between about 1913 and 1927.

When I visited the province it was the arbutus tree that was one of my memorable moments, seeing the orange-fleshed forms along the road in the sunlight was a special part of the experience.
When encouraged to start showing again in 1927, she had a bigger impact than she had earlier experienced. This was especially so when she gained attention of the National Gallery in an exhibit of west-coast art. Making contact with Lawren Harris and others in the Group of Seven Canadian artists was also a big influence.
Perhaps it was Harris' influence that had her gradually evolve into broader landscape subjects, and there is certainly some cross-fertilization evident in the work in this latter period of her life.

Her "The Mountain" from 1933 captures a bit of this. With the tiny village below the looming mass of the landscape. This one makes me think a bit of the "Frank Slide" of 1903, and how the planet can erase the presence of humans with the slightest shrug.
Her health waned with heart attacks in '37 and '39, and strokes shortly thereafter. Carr's efforts turned to writing in the early '40s, with several well-regarded works produced both then and posthumously. (Carr's "Book of Small" for example.)
Emily Carr died in 1945 at the age of 73.
Well known and respected across Canada in the late 20th century and beyond, recent sales of her works command millions of dollars at auction.