- [VIDEO] Douglas Coupland on his exhibition
- By Vancouver Art Gallery on July 3, 2014
- Watch Now! A video introduction by the artist and Daina Augaitis, Senior Curator.
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News / News
- What’s Gumhead?
- By Douglas Coupland on May 27, 2014
- Hello All…Gumhead will soon be here, so let’s discuss its roots. For the past decade I’ve had a large and complex relationship with the notion of defacement. This interest…
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- An Artist Edition
- By Vancouver Art Gallery on May 14, 2014
- Coinciding with the opening of Douglas Coupland: everywhere is anywhere is anything is everything will be the release of Doug’s Artist Edition, titled Lego as Self Portrait, which…
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Contact & Media
Address
750 Hornby Street,
Vancouver, BC
V6Z 2H7
Gallery Hours
Daily 10am — 5pm
Tuesdays until 9pm
- Administration
- 604.662.4700
- Generous support from:
- Vancouver Foundation
- The Artworkers Retirement Society
- Gary R. Bell
- Jake and Judy Kerr
- Digital Application developed with the participation of Creative BC and the British Columbia Arts Council
Image credits Top: Douglas Coupland, Brilliant Information Overload Pop Head, 2010 (detail), acrylic and epoxy on pigment print, Collection of Lucia Haugen Lundin. Background images: (top and bottom) Mist Fantasy, 2010 (detail), acrylic on linen, Private Collection; The pioneers believed the land was holy. The New World was the last thing on earth that could be given to humankind: two continents spanning the poles–continents as clean and green and milky blue as the First Day. The New World was built to make mankind surrender., 2011 (detail), acrylic and latex on canvas, Private Collection; Four Seasons (Fall), 2014 (detail), Courtesy of the Artist and Daniel Faria Gallery; The Poet, 2013 (detail), acrylic on linen, Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Promised Gift of the Artist; Background images: Mist Fantasy, 2010, acrylic on linen, Private Collection Spectra Four Seasons, 2010 (detail), pencil crayons, Plexiglas, series of 4, Collection of Encana Corporation, Calgary The pioneers believed the land was holy. The New World was the last thing on earth that could be given to humankind: two continents spanning the poles–continents as clean and green and milky blue as the First Day. The New World was built to make mankind surrender., 2011, acrylic and latex on canvas, Private Collection The Poet, 2013, acrylic on linen, Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Promised Gift of the Artist Four Seasons, 2013 (detail), Courtesy of the Artist and Daniel Faria Gallery