Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road, 2000

Road disappearing into the distance with headlight shining on it as if the perspective is you are the driver, at sunset.

Christopher Pratt, Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road, 2000, oil on hardboard, 101.6 x 165.1 cm, Private collection

“Few things are as time-out-of-life as driving,” Christopher Pratt once wrote. “Sometimes I think I could drive forever.​​ Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road can be seen as both a personal reflection and a broader symbol. It evokes the act of moving through familiar places while also looking up and outward. It’s about the tension between the known and the unknown, and the stillness that often defines Canadian art, and particularly the atmosphere of the island of Newfoundland when experienced by car.


For Pratt, driving was a form of meditation—an act of slipping into the in-between, where attention sharpened and time loosened its hold. At night, the experience deepened with the stars scattered above, the looming possibility of a moose at the roadside, and the narrow ribbon of road illuminated only by the car’s headlights. In that space, the world seemed suspended, outside of time. And as often happens in Newfoundland, the viewer is utterly alone—the only car moving through the night.

photo of winding road in the forest on a sunny day

Burgeo Road, 2016, photograph by Mireille Eagan.

This painting features one of Pratt’s “Places of Memory”—a real-world route that he revisited both in person and in his art. The Burgeo Road (Route 480), a 150‑kilometre stretch travelling into southwestern Newfoundland, runs through remote pine forests, past rock outcrops, and around lakes, ending at the isolated town of Burgeo. Pratt first drove this route with then-wife Jeanette Meehan, who suggested the journey down a road he had never visited before.


The root feeling in Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road comes from how night “snaps around a car while driving.” Pratt observed the mathematics of a road’s curve, noting how geometry intertwines with perception. In that space, peripheral vision fragments into banded headlights, asphalt, distant trees. A ribbon of highway plunges into darkness, arced by the curve of the road and crowned by a sliver of planet—the “Venus” of the title—hovering low in the night sky.


The inclusion of Venus points to Pratt’s celestial ​​​attentions​. He was interested in the charting of stars for navigation and often placed planets or moons alongside earthly subjects—from his moonlit houses and harbours to star-bright evenings. Venus here acts as a signpost: a reminder of scale and perspective. In Newfoundland, he saw home and cosmos reflected in each other—especially under the open sky of Route 480. to star-bright evenings.

view of road in the winter at sunset

Christopher Pratt, Winter Solstice Drive to St. Anthony, Full Moon Rising, 2008, oil on canvas, 45.5 x 70 inches, collection of W.J. Wyatt.

Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road belongs to a series of “road” paintings that trace liminal states—such as Driving to Venus: From Eddies Cove East, 2000, and Winter Solstice Drive to St. Anthony, Full Moon Rising, 2008—where the viewer experiences journeys through darkness, headlights, and framed views. Pratt’s night drive series reflects a broader tradition in Canadian art that looks at how landscape and identity are connected. Like depictions of the northern wilderness by the Group of Seven, Pratt’s roads tap into something shared in the national imagination. But where other artists show vast, heroic landscapes, Pratt’s night skies and highway arcs are more intimate, rooted in the experience of driving through his home province, especially at night, reflecting a more internal journey.

Gallery

landscape using muted colours of tress, land, sky, and oil

Christopher Pratt, Gros Morne (At Portland Creek), 1960, oil on Plywood, 91 x 91.5 cm, The Rooms, St. John’s.

serigraph of a boat in the sand

Christopher Pratt, Gros Morne (At Portland Creek), 1961, serigraph on paper (working proof), 42 x 75.2 cm, The Rooms, St. John’s

woman sitting at dresser mirror without shirt on

Christopher Pratt, Woman at a Dresser, 1964, oil on hardboard, 67.2 x 77.5 cm, McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg, Ontario

painting of a lynx in the snow

Christopher Pratt, The Lynx, 1965, Serigraph on paper, 51.8 x 76.2 cm, The Rooms, St. John’s

two level simple brown house, straight on view with water in the distance

Christopher Pratt, House in August, 1969, oil on board, 44.5 x 62.2 cm, Currier Museum of Art, New Hampshire

view looking out of a window at brick institutional buildings

Christopher Pratt, Institution, 1973, oil on Masonite, 76.2 x 76.2 cm, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

shadows of trees on a white siding house with pine trees in the background

Christopher Pratt, Spring at My Place, 1985, serigraph, 50.6 x 95.7 cm, The Rooms, St. John’s

Man walking to shed in the winter with a flashlight at night

Christopher Pratt, Christmas Eve at 12 O’Clock, 1995, lithograph on paper (A/P VI), 25.8 x 28.5 cm, The Rooms, St. John’s

Rows of glowing windoes set into a fortress-like power station framed by the night sky

Christopher Pratt, Deer Lake: Junction Brook Memorial, 1999, oil on canvas, 114.5 x 305 cm, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Road disappearing into the distance with headlight shining on it as if the perspective is you are the driver, at sunset.

Christopher Pratt, Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road, 2000, oil on hardboard, 101.6 x 165.1 cm, Private collection

a long dock in the water with a bird soaring above

Christopher Pratt, After the Cold War: Argentia Approach, 2008, oil on canvas, 152.4 x 177.8 cm, Private collection

four paintings oh the coast line

From left to right:  Christopher Pratt, Winter Suite 1: West Fall Evening, 2009, oil on board, 91.4 x 104.1 cm, private collection; Christopher Pratt, Winter Suite 2: North Winter Night, 2009, oil on board, 91.4 x 104.1 cm, private collection; Christopher Pratt, Winter Suite 3: East Spring Morning, 2009, oil on board, 91.4 x 104.1 cm, private collection; Christopher Pratt, Summer 1/1 4: South Summer Noon, 2009, oil on board, 91.4 x 104.1 cm, private collection.

Driving to Venus: On the Burgeo Road