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Abundance Fenced
December 2011Steel
42m
City of Vancouver
Taking delight in the refractive qualities of the materials and a location that sweeps down and up to the Two Sisters we created a bracelet large enough for a City to wear.
Location: Kensington Park - 4900 Knight Street, Vancouver BC.
Northwest quadrant of park, Southeast of traffic lights at intersection of 33rd & Knight Street
The 42-metre-long steel fence sits on top of a retaining wall and shields the pedestrian pathway. The artwork, with its distinctive design that is a fusion of Haida formline and graphic animation, reminds those who pass by of the historic and contemporary influences of indigenous nations along the Pacific Northwest coast. The steel fence, with its grids and rivets that delineate the eyes, mouths and fins of the whales and the salmon, represents a type of vessel similar to the ships that anchor at Port Metro Vancouver--the destination of the majority of the trucks driving along the street below the artwork. The sculpture depicts two sets of stylized whales facing opposite directions with their tale flukes meeting in the centre. The whales pursue salmon cascading down the slope towards the North Shore mountains.
Location: Kensington Park - 4900 Knight Street, Vancouver BC.
Northwest quadrant of park, Southeast of traffic lights at intersection of 33rd & Knight Street
The 42-metre-long steel fence sits on top of a retaining wall and shields the pedestrian pathway. The artwork, with its distinctive design that is a fusion of Haida formline and graphic animation, reminds those who pass by of the historic and contemporary influences of indigenous nations along the Pacific Northwest coast. The steel fence, with its grids and rivets that delineate the eyes, mouths and fins of the whales and the salmon, represents a type of vessel similar to the ships that anchor at Port Metro Vancouver--the destination of the majority of the trucks driving along the street below the artwork. The sculpture depicts two sets of stylized whales facing opposite directions with their tale flukes meeting in the centre. The whales pursue salmon cascading down the slope towards the North Shore mountains.
Media Coverage
- Hot Art: Abundance Fenced by Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas - Where Canada, April 6, 2012
- Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas: Haida Manga Public Art - The Vancouver Sun, December 2, 2011
- Sculpture Abundance Fenced Completed - The Beat, October 9, 2011
- Yahgulaanas’ The Bracelet of Abundance - The Beat, June 3, 2011