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Lighthouse Park – Golden Hour | Limited Edition Vancouver Wall Art Print

Lighthouse Park – Golden Hour | Limited Edition Vancouver Wall Art Print

C$150.00Price

Vancouver wall art that feels like home.

This limited edition Vancouver watercolor print captures Lighthouse Park at golden hour — not simply as a landmark, but as a lived moment shaped by light, atmosphere, and memory.

Created by a Vancouver-based artist, this piece brings the quiet beauty of the North Shore coastline into your living space.
 

Part of The Vancouver Meisho Series, this work reinterprets Vancouver’s iconic landscapes through Western watercolor technique with a subtle Japanese sensibility — balancing realism and quiet poetic atmosphere.
 

In a world of endless revision, this work honors the irreversible trace of the human hand. Each decision remains embedded in the surface — a moment that cannot be recreated.
 

For those who have walked these trails, it offers a whisper of nostalgia. For others, it reveals Vancouver through a more intimate lens.
 

  • The Story

    Lighthouse Park: The Golden Hour is the first release of The Vancouver Meisho Series, reinterpreting iconic landmarks through Western watercolor and Japanese-influenced sensibility.

    Inspired by the quiet beauty of West Vancouver’s coastline, this piece captures the fleeting moment of golden hour — where silence and vivid light exist together, and the modern city feels timeless.

  • The Print

    Limited edition of 20 — once sold out, never reprinted.
    Hand-signed and numbered by the artist.
    Printed on archival 310gsm fine art paper (Hahnemühle).
    Standard 12” × 16” size for easy framing.
    Certificate of authenticity included.

  • Shipping

    All prints are carefully packaged in a rigid mailer with waterproof protection to ensure safe delivery.

    Shipped worldwide from the JACLOT studio in Vancouver, Canada.

  • About JACLOT

    My perspective is shaped by multiple worlds.
    Born and raised in Argentina, and having lived nearly two decades in Japan, I paint Vancouver through a cultural lens that is both Western and Japanese.
    This series is my way of translating the city’s landscapes into something intimate, symbolic, and deeply personal — a meeting point of place, memory, and identity.

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