"Waking In The Quiet Dawn" Eric Louie's New Exhibition is a Meditation on Architecture, Light, and the Ephemeral Self

Bau-Xi Gallery presents Waking In The Quiet Dawn, a striking new exhibition by Vancouver-based painter Eric Louie that delves into the evolving dialogue between digital creation and traditional painting. In this timely body of work, the artist reflects on the blurring boundaries between reality and simulation in an AI-driven world, translating digital renderings into physical, emotive canvases. Through motifs of light, memory, and imagined architecture, the exhibition speaks to our cultural obsession with novelty, the digital pursuit of identity, and the fleeting visibility of the self in a hyperconnected age.

The exhibition will be on view from June 5th - 30th at Bau-Xi Gallery | Dufferin in Toronto (1384 Dufferin Street). An opening reception will take place on Thursday, June 5th from 5:00 – 8:00 pm with Eric Louie in attendance.

Artist Statement:

“I’ve been exploring painting under the digital influence for some time, and how it has become the framework for the way we communicate in most areas of modern life. As the use of AI has become more prevalent, the blur between reality and fiction is stronger and unavoidable. I’ve been using Procreate to bring my ideas to life, and as a result, have begun emulating the renderings and their characteristics in my work. When transcribing this information, a digital form is spoken through a language as old as painting. As a result, the process becomes experimental and physical.

I like to think of the imagery in my paintings as glorified memories or imaginations of waking events. Perhaps these moments are idealized, like the way we choose to remember the past or envision the future - with added flare and heightened reality, the hyperbole, the romanticism. We seem obsessed as a species, looking for something new and impressive with excessive and insatiable hunger. That sense of awe and reverence has become addictive when seeing and experiencing new things. I wanted to capture that essence associated with technology with whisps of futurism and shiny surfaces. This desire to chase newness, along with our dependence on using digital media to find answers and identity, leaves us questioning who we are as a species and what role technology plays as we head into the unknown. I find it both frightening and amazing in its potential.

This body of work represents a time of introspection and reflection. Many of the paintings use motifs of light sources, gathering places or bodies. Buildings and edifices wrapped in overgrowth or bare for the world to see are depicted in some instances. Just like how we arise from obscurity, emerging for a moment, then receding or vanishing until the next time. Every subject searching for its moment, this aspect of the human condition is so delicate, so ephemeral. The infinite potential is something to live for.” – Eric Louie on Waking In The Quiet Dawn

About Eric Louie:

Eric Louie is a Vancouver-based painter whose sculptural, organic abstracts allude to landscape, still life and even portraiture. His signature metallic, shimmering forms, achieved via many thin layers of luminescent glazes, are central to the virtual worlds he creates. Louie's works possess a chameleonic ability to exist comfortably among a multitude of aesthetics, from 1920s Art Deco and Mid-Century Modern through to the late 20th Century and into the forefront of contemporary design.

Louie holds a B.F.A from the Alberta College of Art and Design, where he was awarded the prestigious Jason Lang Scholarship. His work is included in numerous private and public collections including CIBC, Encana Energy, NBC Studios, Paramount and MGM Pictures, as well as the City of Calgary.



Latest Videos


"Waking In The Quiet Dawn" Eric Louie's New Exhibition is a Meditation on Architecture, Light, and the Ephemeral Self

Leaflet | © Mapbox © OpenStreetMap Improve this map