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Grand Entry

4.0 (1 review)

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9 months ago

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Spinning Chandelier by Rodney Graham

Spinning Chandelier by Rodney Graham

(3 reviews)

Downtown

The spinning chandelier by Rodney Graham should be added to the points of interest for Vancouver…read more If you are into the arts, this is a cool thing to see. The spinning chandelier is situated under the Grandville Street bridge. From downtown it's convenient to get here by foot or public transportation. Three times during the day there is a chandelier show where it lights up and spins. The times are 12 PM, 4 PM, and 9 PM.

I realize that what constitutes "good art" from "bad art" is totally subjective, and that beauty is…read moreindeed in the eye of the beholder. I also understand how and why this particular art piece is so very controversial. After all, it DID cost nearly 5 million dollars and, in essence, it IS a fancy chandelier installed under a bridge where, often, homeless people sleep, in a city ridden with housing issues and homeless people who've fallen through the cracks of society. This art installation has received a ton of flak, deemed "tone deaf" in a world and a place rife with serious issues. All that said, I LOVED this piece, and I will tell you why: -this piece does what "good art" should: it elicits a dialogue about contemporary and/or significant social issues. The very fact that this piece is controversial and has elicited such strong reactions, both positive and negative, tells me that it has done a great service by bringing attention to issues like the homeless, affordable housing, and public art. The worst thing any art could do would be to be ignorable and inconsequential, and have people walk by it and either not notice it or not care. Love it or hate it, you can't say that about this spinning chandelier! People have very strong, visceral opinions about it, either way. But everyone DOES have an opinion about it! -people who take umbrage with this piece often bemoan its high cost and say this money could've been put to better use by feeding and housing the homeless. It's important to note that this art piece was commissioned and purchased by Westbank, the developer of the adjacent Vancouver House. It was not bought by the City. As such, it was privately purchased. I have art in my own home that I've bought - and some I've made myself - and I know that not all of it is liked (or even understood) by others, and I'm okay with that. No-one should criticize me for my taste in art, that I purchased myself. If I was allowed to put it in a public space for others to enjoy, perhaps most would love it and appreciate the fact that they get to enjoy contemporary art without having to pay admission price to a gallery; others may dislike the art, or resent that it is there. But they can't complain that they funded it when they did not, and it would be presumptuous for them to say I should have given my personal money to other charitable causes than fund art. After all, who's to say I don't also give to charitable causes, too? It's my money and I can do with it as I want. -for those who say they "hate" this piece and it shouldn't be on display, I counter, hey, I might hate rap music, but I'd never argue that it should never be made or played. Who am I to tell others what music they should listen to? This piece is really amazing. It is a huge chandelier, comprised of many dangling crystal-like pendants. They've added a third "spinning" time, so now it drops and spins three times a day: at 12 noon, 4pm and 9pm. When it drops, the chandelier lights up, and it spins for about 5 minutes before ascending back to its original position under the bridge. I visited it the other day at 4 pm and videotaped the whole performance. I can see how this would be way more dramatic at night, but the daytime performance was super cool, too. It's quite the feat in engineering, and it garnered a lot of attention from passers-by - many of whom stopped to film the show like I did. The only extra feature I can think of that would make this super-duper cool would be to have some music playing during the spinning performance. That would elevate the drama! But still, it's truly a spectacle, and I thoroughly enjoyed the whole whimsy of it! A short hop from the seawall at Howe, and right beside the New Vancouver House and Fresh St. Market and London Drugs between Beach and Pacific. It's truly a sight to behold! Check it out!

Coopers Mews Art - Five overhead barrels paying homage to the area's past history as a Cooperage.

Coopers Mews Art

(1 review)

Yaletown, Downtown

There's a corridor of grass creating a walkway between two Yaletown condo buildings on Coopers…read moreMews, between Marinaside Crescent and Pacific Blvd, and here lies the most intriguing art installation: there is a long, extended overhead track made of metal rails, reminiscent of a winding rollercoaster track (except it's level, without dips or inclines), and at the Marinaside side, there rests 5 large wooden barrels on top of the overhead track. Under the track, embedded in the grass, is an undulating walkway of stopping stones, resembling a winding keyboard of sorts. I've often smiled when seeing these barrels, as I walk my dog daily in Coopers' Park nearby (just beside the Cambie Bridge a few feet from this area), and there's a prominent sign at the park which describes the areas history as a sawmill (originally known as the Sweeney Cooperage which, at one time, was the largest barrel-maker in the entire British Empire, making barrels for over 40 countries. WOW). So I was aware of the history of barrel-making here, and these overhead barrels are a nice homage to the area's past. But I never really checked out the metal track or the windy walkway below until recently. There aren't any inscription plates or panels that I could find about this piece, so I did some research online. The artist who created this work is Alan Storey. Supposedly, according to the City's website on public art, if one walks on the 12 embedded panels below this track, steam escapes through the barrels, creating a sound, and you could theoretically create a "tune" by stepping on the different panels. So this is intended to be an interactive art installation! Cool! So today while walking my dog I visited this piece and I stepped - and then jumped - on each of the panels. No steam came out any of the barrels and no sounds were emitted. So this function is not operational. I was disappointed. But still, it's still a neat piece, visually, and it still makes me smile when I see the barrels.

Time Top sculpture

Time Top sculpture

(1 review)

Yaletown, Downtown

Under the Cambie Bridge, on the east side (in Yaletown, by Marinaside Cr.), by the seawall, in the…read morewater, is the most unusual sci-fi-esque sculpture called the Time Top. It is 13 feet tall and bulbous shaped, made of water-weathered old bronze, and stands on three thick metal posts, like a spaceship on a tripod. The top is capped by a clear lucite dome. And on the seawall are five capstones with the works title (Time Top) and artist (Jerry Pethick) and three comic book scenes of this spaceship traveling through time and space. It's like a scene out of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone! Retro and cool and definitely unworldly. I had to research this whimsical and mysterious piece, as I've never quite seen a public art piece like it. Seems the artist was inspired by a 1935 comic strip about a spaceship and he imagined it traveling through time and dropping down in False Creek in Vancouver. (The actual comic strip scenes that inspired Pelchick are those carved into the seawall capstones here). The actual bronze work was forged in Sechelt, BC and then submerged in the ocean for two years (!), with an electric charge going trough it, in order to attract mollusks and mineral deposits (hence the weathered appearance). SO interesting! (To me, at least!). It amazes me how many people pass this piece by and don't even notice it. But in a way, I understand since, despite its tall stature and odd shape, its old, nondescript surface blends in with the marine area and it just looks like it's been there forever. It's not glitzy or bright and it doesn't scream "Look at me! Look at me!". It looks like a natural part of the False Creek shoreline here. Like, something landed here eons ago and was taken over by the natural elements of the area, so now it just blends in and is a part of the neighborhood now. And this is exactly why I think it's so cool. Who'd have thunk that a sculpture of a spaceship, embedded in the waters off the seawall under a bridge and beside a playground, would blend in so well with the area that people barely notice it? This gives me pause and makes me laugh to myself! The artist passed away in 2003 so he never got to see this work installed here, but it gives me, and other folks who pay attention to these things, much pleasure. Just another semi-hidden gem in the Vancouver landscape!

Cordials - Cordials, Burnaby

Cordials

(2 reviews)

Metrotown

Located in the courtyard in front of the Station Square shopping center that and opposite Metrotown…read moreStation, this is a collection of five (now four) cast aluminum sculptures that were commissioned by the City of Burnaby for the Station Mall. According to the artist's statement, they were inspired by the original Monopoly game tokens and are to "playfully explore the dynamics of trade and game-playing." If you look about, you'll find the octopus, the dog, a melon, and a ladies shoe. There was also a gentleman Dandy but he is no longer present. As art goes, it's art. It will make sense to some and not to others. Put me in the "not making sense" column here. [Round number review 20900 overall - 76 in British Columbia - 1884 of 2023.]

In 2012, Station Square, a small, run-down shopping complex located beside Metrotown Mall, closed…read moredown for redevelopment. There are now expensive (I assume) condos and several new businesses, as well as an art installation in the main square. Cordials is by Canadian artist Myfanwy MacLeod and was installed in 2018. It consists of five steel and aluminum sculptures: a shoe, a melon, a dandy, an octopus, and a dog. The shoe, melon, and dandy are clearly visible in the main square, and despite walking past the sculptures several times, I hadn't noticed the octopus, which is on the end of a bench in the main square. The dog, which is not located in the main square with the other sculptures, can easily be missed, as it's tucked around the corner beside the Dollarama. Perhaps there are more sculptures, but as far as I can tell, there are only those five. I admit, I don't quite understand these sculptures; these five items seem so unconnected, and why is the dog so far away from the other sculptures? (Also, why isn't it beside the Pet Smart store?) But it's better than no artwork (and the octopus is pretty neat), and they're fun for the kids to climb on. [Yelp collections: Public Art]

Grand Entry - publicart - Updated May 2026

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