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The first E. J. Hughes Gallery is open
six days a week (Monday to Friday 9:30 - 5:00. Saturday 9:30 - 4:00) and is located at 28 Station Street in the heart of
downtown Duncan - less than half a block from the train station.
250-746-7112
The Gallery features the reproductions of Dr Hughes' paintings that
are published and distributed by Pacific Outlook.
Pacific Outlook in Duncan on Vancouver Island is the publisher
of reproductions of E.J. Hughes' art. You can find all that is available
here

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E. J. Hughes
"A National Treasure"
E. J. Hughes 1913 - 2007.

A true son of British Columbia,
Hughes' stylized realism has earned
him a unique place in the history of Canadian art. His 2003 exhibition
included work from the 1930s to 2000 and highlighted evocative
symbols of life on the west coast - ferries crossing the Georgia
Straight, picturesque fishing villages and farm houses, flaming arbutus
trees and imposing coastal mountains.
The E.J. Hughes exhibition was curated by Ian Thom, Senior Historical
Curator, Vancouver Art Gallery and the national authority on E.J.
Hughes' paintings. Ian Thom is also the author of a book,
entitled E.J. Hughes, which catalogues the exhibition, and was
co-published with Douglas and McIntyre.
Hughes remarkable career as an artist, which continues to this day,
spans 70 years and encompasses his work as a gifted printmaker,
successful muralist, outstanding Canadian war artist and prolific
painter. His paintings depict land, sea and small moments of daily life
with a rare clarity and vividness. Hughes has a distinguished reputation
for work underscored by a passion for the beauty of the west coast of
Canada.
"Hughes is at his best depicting British Columbia's unique
beauty", said Ian Thom. "Hughes has a deep affection for the British
Columbian landscape and a vision that is unmistakably his own."
Despite the changing face of the visual arts, Hughes has remained
steadfast in his exploration of a unique and personal approach to
realism. The artist's distinct style, marked by the use of flattened
space, skewed perspective and simplified shapes, defies parallels with
other artists or easy categorization within artistic genres.
"The Vancouver Art Gallery first exhibited the work of E.J. Hughes
in 1935, acquired its first Hughes painting in 1949 and organized the
first retrospective of his work in 1967," said Kathleen Bartels,
Director, Vancouver Art Gallery. "It is therefore a great privilege
for the Gallery to produce the largest exhibition of his work to
date."
The Vancouver Art Gallery has the most significant holding of E.J.
Hughes work in public hands. It is also the only public collection
that contains a complete record of the development of a painting from
sketch, to cartoon to final canvas. This exhibition offered visitors the
first retrospective look at E.J. Hughes work in more than 20 years.
Born in North Vancouver in 1913, E.J. Hughes studied under Charles H.
Scott, Jock Macdonald and Frederick Varley at the Vancouver School of
Applied Art and Design. After graduating in 1933, and following two
years of post-graduate studies, Hughes undertook print and mural
projects with fellow art students. In 1939, Hughes joined the military
and spent six years expanding his artistic skills as an official war
artist. After his discharge from the military in 1946 he returned to the
west coast of Canada, settled in Shawnigan Lake on Vancouver Island with
his wife Fern and began a lifelong study of the province and its
landscape as a professional artist.
Always a quiet achiever, Hughes was the inaugural recipient of an
Emily Carr Scholarship on the recommendation of Group of Seven member
Lawren Harris. By 1951, Hughes was represented in public collections in
Ottawa, Toronto and Vancouver - an achievement unmatched by his
contemporaries at the time. For more than thirty-five years he was
represented by Max Stern of the Dominion Gallery in Montreal. In 2001
E.J. Hughes received the Order of Canada and in 2005 he was awarded the
Order of British Columbia. His achievements and rare success are due to
his singular approach to representing Canada with passion and
originality.
E.J. Hughes lived on Vancouver Island where he continuously
refined
his vision of life in the place that has been his inspiration and home
for so long.
"I have painted in the Cowichan Valley for fifty years and it it
the most beautiful place on earth"
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