He has articles and books on Canadian art, among them Canadian Art: Selected Masters from Private Collections (2003), Independent Spirit: Early Canadian Women Artists (2008), a celebration of work by women artists who changed the face of Canadian art,[5] and Impressionism in Canada: A Journey of Rediscovery (2014), called “astonishingly comprehensive” by one reviewer. [6] It was a best seller[7] on Amazon and a second edition was published by Arnoldsche Art Publishers, Stuttgart.
Philanthropy
In 2012, he established the A. K. Prakash Foundation with the following goals: to advance scholarship on historical Canadian Art, and to promote Canadian medical expertise in increasing global access to health.
Art
The Foundation has sponsored numerous exhibitions and publications in major art galleries across Canada and abroad in the United Kingdom, France, Switzerland, Norway and the Netherlands.[8] Some of the major Canadian exhibitions included, among others, Painting Canada: Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven (National Gallery of Canada),[9][2]Into the Light: The Paintings of William Blair Bruce (1859-1906) (Art Gallery of Hamilton),[10]From the Forest to the Sea: Emily Carr in British Columbia (Art Gallery of Ontario),[2]Modernism in Montreal: The Beaver Hall Group (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts),[11]James Wilson Morrice: The A.K. Prakash Collection in Trust to the Nation (National Gallery of Canada),[12] and Canada and Impressionism: New Horizons (National Gallery of Canada).[13] In 2021, he funded an exhibition of a collection of bronzes by Marc-Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté, Alfred Laliberté, and Louis-Philippe Hébert that he gave to the Musée d’art de Joliette.[14]
In 2015, the National Gallery of Canada received 50 works by James Wilson Morrice, which Prakash acquired work by work since the early 1980s[2] and regarded as the heart of his collection, valued at more than $20 million.[15] The A.K. Prakash Foundation, founded by Prakash, made the donation in honour of the artist's 150th birthday.[16]
Prakash made the following announcement:
"The collection represents a governing force of my life's work. It is my gift to Canada donated in the hope that Morrice will inspire and enrich the lives of my fellow citizens and help remind us that Canadian art stands with the best in the world."
In honour of the gift, in 2015, the National Gallery named a gallery for Prakash[1] and made the Morrice paintings part of a re-launch of the permanent collection in 2017, celebrating the 150th anniversary of the confederation of Canada.[16]
Prakash has also given the National Gallery additional works of Canadian art and in 2022, he gifted the Art Gallery of Ontario Day After the Funeral,
a 1925 watercolor and graphite on paper painting by Edward Hopper, considered the only drawing or watercolor in Canada by Hopper.[17]
Medical
Prakash also founded The A.K. Prakash Fellowship in International Medicine. Annual Fellowships are awarded to medical graduates from the Global South to train under surgeons in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto and then return to their home countries to build and strengthen clinical care and education.[18]
"The Prakash Fellowships provide a wonderful example of the power of philanthropy in the advancement of the University of Toronto as a major force for good in our world"[19]
^"Self-Study Report"(PDF). Self-Study Report - Department of Surgery External Review 2020. U of T , Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine. p. 98. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
^"CURE Hospitals". CURE International. 16 October 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
^"U of T Surgery". U of T Fellowships. university of Toronto. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
^"Self-Study Report"(PDF). Self-Study Report - Department of Surgery External Review 2020. U of T , Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine. p. 98. Retrieved 9 September 2022.