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Emily Carr
House
Emily
Carr House
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With an architecture
described as both "San Francisco Victorian" and "English
Gingerbread," all agree that Emily Carr House is on the must-see
list of Victoria's attractions.
Centrally located only four blocks from the Inner Harbour and the
Provincial Legislature, the house offers its visitors a chance to
gain an insight into Canada's first, and best known, independent
artist and writer.
Emily was born here in 1871, a scant six months after British Columbia
moved from British colonial status to becoming a province of the
world's newest nation. She used her brushes and pens to proclaim
her pride in this part of Canada for the rest of her life.
Emily developed
a passion for nature, animals and art, and at age seventeen studied
painting first in San Francisco and later in Paris and London. After
teaching art to children in Vancouver, she returned to Victoria
in 1913 and built the "House of All Sorts", a boarding
house for anyone who needed shelter. She undertook a series of ambitious
journeys into the remote wilderness, visited isolated native villages,
and drew inspiration from the hundreds of sketches and water-colours
she brought back from these journeys.
Millie, as she
was known to her family and friends, started writing in her later
years as her health failed. In 1941 she published her novel Klee
Wyck which won the Governor's General's Award. She wrote several
other best sellers, including The Book of Small and The Heart of
a Peacock. Emily Carr died on March 2 1945 and was buried on the
Carr Family plot at the Ross Bay Cemetery in Victoria.
In the restored
rooms of the house, built in 1864, you'll enter into the same Victorian
ambiance the Carr family would have known in the 1870s, and upstairs
are several of their actual possessions, including some of Emily's
pottery and sculpture.
One room is
now used as the "People's Gallery" to present the work
of Canadian artists, and at the rear of the house a small gift shop
offers a remarkably varied selection of items produced by Victoria
artists and potters.
The house is
near Victoria's central Inner Harbour, at 207 Government Street,
only a 10-minute walk south from the Royal B.C. Museum and the Legislative
Buildings. The house is open to the general public from mid-May
to mid-October, every day from 10 am to 5 pm. Admission fees are
in effect. Special openings are scheduled at other times of the
year, especially in December.
Contact details:
Emily Carr House
207 Government Street
Victoria
B.C. V8V 2K3
Telephone: (250)
383-5843
Fax: (250) 356-7796
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