City of Olympic & Paralympic Public Art Welcome

It is with great pleasure that I invite residents and visitors to discover Vancouver’s newly commissioned Olympic and Paralympic public art, which has added yet another unique dimension to our city’s current collection.

Vancouver has long been blessed with a magnificent natural landscape. Now, this collection brings us many steps closer to redefining our built landscape with artworks that are transforming our cultural and physical backdrop.

The sculptures, installations and events in this city-wide collection reflect the spirit and values of Vancouver and the 2010 Winter Games, from their nod to our historical and social fabric to their innovative incorporation of sustainable materials. Bold and vibrant, they have been created by respected established and emerging artists from Vancouver and Canada. We’re also pleased to include in this collection exciting international artists working in contemporary art.

The diversity of Vancouver’s Olympic and Paralympic public art reflects the City’s vision to invest in the creative arts and culture of Vancouver during the next decade. As the world spotlight turns to Vancouver in 2010, I know these works will stand out as highlights of the City’s legacy of the 2010 Winter Games long after the Olympic Flame is extinguished.

Gregor Robertson Mayor of Vancouver

On the cover: Ice Light by Gunda Förster, Concept image, 2009 Photo: Tania Ruiz Gutiérrez Welcome

Vanessa Kwan Concept image, 2009 About the program

The City of Vancouver’s Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program includes more than 20 new perma- nent and temporary public artworks commissioned for the 2010 Winter Games.

This diverse collection ranges from grand light-based works and sculptural installations at city landmarks to celebratory works in the heart of our communities. One commission, Bright Light, brings together the talent and imaginations of art organizations based in the Downtown Eastside, showcasing the cultural vitality of one of Vancouver’s most dynamic neighbourhoods. The City is also pleased to collaborate with the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad and the on spectacular projects that bring the world to Vancouver, and Vancouver to the world.

For more than two decades, the City’s Public Art Program has invigorated civic spaces and private develop­ments. The program aims to foster works of art that express the spirit, values, visions, and poetry of place that collectively define Vancouver.

The Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program brings public art to new and familiar places. Look for these new commissions in parks, on streets and waterways, and in the skies above.

1 Rodney Graham Concept model, 2009 Photo: Robert Keziere

Aerodynamic Forms in Space Rodney Graham

Georgia Street entrance to Stanley Park

A major figure in Canadian and international contemporary art, Vancouver artist Rodney Graham is well known for his conceptual and often humourous sculptures. His piece for the Georgia Street entrance to Stanley Park, a spectacular 400-hectare evergreen oasis in the downtown peninsula, plays with the theme of flight—a whimsical reference to the location’s nearby seaplanes.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 1

2 Christian Kliegel Concept image, 2009

Walk In/Here You Are Christian Kliegel & Cate Rimmer

Vancouver Central Library—North Plaza 350 West Georgia Street January – December 2010

Vancouver artist Christian Kliegel’s architecturally- inspired structure on the Vancouver Central Library’s north plaza serves as an open-air theatre for Here You Are, an outdoor exhibition of video, still and performance works by local artists. Curated by Cate Rimmer, curator for the Charles H. Scott Gallery at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, the installation will feature six different exhibition programs over the year.

Walk In/Here You Are explores ideas of presentation and location. It invites visitors to interact with the installation’s physical components and to use it as an outdoor social space while viewing works by both established and emerging Vancouver artists.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 2

3 Ron Terada Concept image, 2009

The Words Don’t Fit The Picture Ron Terada

Vancouver Central Library—South Plaza 350 West Georgia Street

Vancouver artist Ron Terada’s light-based artwork for the Central Library takes its cue from an era when signs were seen as grand iconic landmarks. The work is a reference to Vancouver’s neon past, when the famous BOW-MAC sign and legendary Woodward’s W reigned over the city’s skyline. Its location by the library touches on, in a poetic way, the use of words and language as boundless and imaginative—a catalyst for multiple meanings.

Learn more: call 604.998.8038, press 3

4 Vanessa Kwan Concept image, 2009

Vancouver Vancouver Vancouver Vanessa Kwan

Roundhouse Community Centre 181 Roundhouse Mews Vancouver Central Library 350 West Georgia Street February 13 – March 21, 2010

Vanessa Kwan’s Vancouver Vancouver Vancouver is a mobile sculptural kiosk that can be found at various sites during the 2010 Winter Games. Kiosk attendants will distribute what look like conventional tourist postcards that actually have a die-cut hole in the centre, allowing visitors to frame their vistas in individual ways. Visitors will have a chance to share their custom postcards by posting them to Flickr.

See www.vancouvervancouvervancouver.com for details.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 4

5 Adrian Göllner & Pierre Poussin Concept image, 2009

Boulevard Adrian Göllner & Pierre Poussin

Cambie Street, from Broadway to King Edward Avenue Hamilton & Mainland Streets, from Pacific Boulevard to West Georgia Street

As a way of brightening Vancouver’s dark winter nights, Canadian artists Adrian Göllner and Pierre Poussin have created three artistic lighting schemes for the Cambie Street corridor and . Fireworks Boulevard, a series of LED fireworks down Cambie Street, welcomes visitors as they travel along one of Vancouver’s busiest routes. Downtown, people can find their way between LiveCity Vancouver celebration sites by following Rain Barrels, a group of cool blue animated light sequences, and Flames, a set of flickering candle-like LED lights that bring a touch of the Olympic Torch outdoors.

Hear the artists: call 604.998.8038, press 5

6 Photo: , 2009

Surface Fiona Bowie

False Creek Community Centre 1318 Cartwright Street Other sites to be confirmed

Surface is a live documentary of the rich under­ water life of , transmitted from a camera mounted under (a small commuter ferry) to screens located onshore. During the term of its installation, Vancouver artist Fiona Bowie hopes to track the health of False Creek’s marine life as evidence of our collective footprint.

Viewers can also watch the footage live online at www.surfacer.ca.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 6

7 J. Andres Ruiz Concept image, 2009

Garde-temps Tania Ruiz Gutiérrez

Under the Cambie Street Bridge at West 2nd Avenue (by Olympic Village Canada Line Station)

Paris-based artist Tania Ruiz Gutiérrez’s imaginative open-space video art installations and programmed digital works have gained her worldwide recognition. Garde-temps, her light- based sculptural work under the Cambie Street Bridge, traces the geometric abstract forms of weaving to the fabrication of modern film and photographic images. Using a camera that captures heat, movement on the walkway under the bridge is revealed on a large colourful vase located beside the pedestrian path.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 7

8 Gunda Förster Concept image, 2009 Photo: Tania Ruiz Gutiérrez

Ice Light Gunda Förster

Vancouver City Hall West 12th Avenue & Cambie Street

German artist Gunda Förster’s inventive light installations can be found in major cities through- out Europe. Ice Light, her work for Vancouver City Hall and her first North American commission, appears as ice gracing the edges of the heritage building. Starting at dusk, as City Hall’s tower clock marks the hour, the lights cascade over the building’s external edges. In addition to its artistic qualities, the installation’s use of LED lights will reduce the power consumption of City Hall’s exterior lighting by more than 70 per cent.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 8

9 Anna Ruth Concept image, 2009 Photo: Juho Jäppinen

Sensory Maps of Vancouver Anna Ruth

Various bus shelters throughout Vancouver January 25 – March 21, 2010

Sensory Maps of Vancouver is a series of drawings that records the movement of city buses and, at the same time, reflects the experience of public transportation in the urban environment. Using simple drawing tools, Finland-based artist Anna Ruth let the vibrations of each vehicle dictate the lines she translated to paper as she rode and moved from bus to bus during a 24-hour period. The end result—twenty bus routes, one train line and one Seabus trip later—is a collection of enlarged ‘maps’ that are displayed in bus shelter advertising spaces around Vancouver. The map legends include details about the bus, the driver, the stops, times of travel and weather conditions.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 9

10 Ken Lum Concept image, 2009

Monument for East Vancouver Ken Lum

Clark Drive & East 6th Avenue

Vancouver artist Ken Lum’s Monument for East Vancouver is a large-scale version of a street image that has circulated in East Vancouver for decades: a crossword of VAN EAST using the common “A”. With the entire cross-shaped text outlined in white LED lights, the installation has multiple associations, including religion and irreverence, and is an assertion of eastside identity. The work is located at the crest of East 6th Avenue at Clark Drive, where it can be seen from significant vantage points to the west.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 10

11 David MacWilliam Kingsway Luminaires, 2009 Photo: Scott Massey

Kingsway Luminaires David MacWilliam

Kingsway at Knight Street

Vancouver artist David MacWilliam’s six hand-cast translucent forms stand as beacons on lamp standards in the medians on Kingsway near Knight Street. Inspired by combinations of historical streetlights, Kingsway Luminaires features LED lights that slowly change colour, beginning at dusk and continuing through dawn. The artist’s intent is to provide nearby residents and commuters a multi-hued marker as part of their everyday experience.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 11

12 Geoffrey Farmer Every Letter In The Alphabet, 2009

Every Letter In The Alphabet Geoffrey Farmer

1875 Powell Street at Victoria Drive November 15, 2009 – November 14, 2010 Thursday to Sunday, 11 am to 5 pm Check project website for other locations

Every Letter In The Alphabet (ELITA) is a year-long project through which Vancouver artist Geoffrey Farmer is commissioning, gathering and producing a wide variety of text-based works for distribution and placement in and around Vancouver.

Visit the ELITA project space, where the works, from three-word hand-written signs to posters, artworks and reference texts, will be dis­played throughout the year. Check the exhibition schedule online at www.everyletterinthealphabet.ca for current information. Also follow the project on Twitter: @vryltrnthlfbt, and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/everyletterinthealphabet.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 12

13 Myfanwy MacLeod Concept image, 2009

The Birds Myfanwy MacLeod

Southeast False Creek Plaza (Olympic Village) 1 Athletes Way

Vancouver artist Myfanwy MacLeod has always been interested in the ability of art to convey political and historical meaning. The Birds, her work for Southeast False Creek Olympic Plaza, has been shaped by this new community’s focus on sustainability. The work highlights both the lighter and graver sides of what can happen when a non-native species is introduced to an environment, how the beauty of birds can sometimes mask their threat to biodiversity.

Watch for The Birds, which will be installed after the 2010 Winter Games.

Hear the artist: call 604.998.8038, press 13

14 ‘5’ Paul Wong, ‘5’, 2009 Paul Wong

Various locations ‘5’ events: February 13—5.1 Live webcast of launch of 5.paulwongprojects.com February 20—5.2 ZOOOOOM, moving audio/visual tours departing from the Lifestyle Lounge at 68 West 5th Avenue February 27—5.3 LED Down the Garden Path at the Bloedel Conservatory March 6—5.4 One More Than Three at Mountain View Cemetery Celebration Centre March 13—5.5 Five Elements at Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Chinese Garden, Chinatown

Five links, five Olympic rings, five moments, five art/multimedia events at five sites in five zones ... Vancouver artist Paul Wong and guest artists will lead viewers/participants on five extraordinary journeys that explore the five senses and five elements in virtual space as well as real, invented and imagined places. These happenings will take place on the five Saturdays during the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.

Visit 5.paulwongprojects.com for complete event details and ticket information.

More info: olympichostcity.vancouver.ca/cityhighlights/

15 Canadian ski jumper Nata de Leeuw Project Rainbow, Blue, 2009 Photo: Dylan Doubt Blue Project Rainbow: Jesse Birch, Jade Boyd, Heidi Nutley & Sydney Vermont

Film excerpts at these locations: Video screen at Robson & Granville Streets Centre A—2 West Hastings Street Chinese Cultural Centre—50 East Pender Street Solder & Sons Bookstore—247 Main Street Strathcona Community Centre—601 Keefer Street February 12 – March 21, 2010

Blue is an experimental film and dance documentary that features members of the Canadian Women’s Ski Jumping Team as well as settings in a rapidly changing Downtown Eastside. Both are in a state of transition, whether it be waiting for a chance to compete or witnessing the transformation of a community. Blue marks these historical, geographical and cultural changes.

Each location will show a separate chapter of the film. For more information, please visit www.projectrainbow.typepad.com.

Hear the artists: call 604.998.8038, press 14

16 Fearless City W Stories, 2008 Photo: Gavin Schraeder

Bright Light Various organizations

Public Art for a Midwinter Celebration February 12 – March 21, 2010

Bright Light is a collection of new public art projects taking place along and around Vancouver’s Carrall Street Greenway during the 2010 Winter Games. The program is a collaborative effort of artists and arts organizations active in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside to produce art installations and events that will light up the neighbourhood and showcase the community’s cultural vitality.

Have a look at the event list on the following pages. For complete details about programming, times and locations, visit www.bright-light.ca.

More info: www.bright-light.ca

17 Bright Light Installations and Events Passage Access Gallery—206 Carrall Street February 12 – March 21, Tues–Sat, 12–5 pm Access Gallery and curator Charo Neville present Passage, a storefront window video and light installation by Cuban-born artist Osvaldo Yero that explores the Cuban immigration experience.

Brawl Andy Livingstone Field—Carrall & Keefer Streets February 24, 7–9 pm Artspeak Gallery presents Brawl, a new performance art work by Vancouver artist collective NORMA examining collective behaviour, cultural patterns and local histories.

GO! A Temporary Gallery for Permanent Change Yue Shan Courtyard, via East Pender Street and Market Alley Multiple events from February 12 – 28, 6–10 pm ASIR Studio, Rural Urban Fantasy Project and Organelle Design team up for an illuminated multi-dimensional installation in one of Chinatown’s oldest and almost- forgotten courtyards.

World Tea Party Centre A 2 West Hastings Street Multiple events from February 12 – 28, March 13–21 Centre A hosts the latest incarnation of the World Tea Party, curated by Bryan Mulvihill. Enjoy fireside

tea services in Pigeon Park and Tea Cups Waiting, 2002 other events. Photo: Bryan Mulvihill

Nighthawk Aboriginal Arts & Music Festival Crab Park—101 East Waterfront Road March 21, 2–9 pm The Downtown Eastside Centre for the Arts presents this lively festival, showcasing the Git Hayetsk dancers and drummers as well as music performances by Murray Porter, Dennis Lakusta, Dalannah Gail Bowen and others.

More info: www.bright-light.ca

18 Bright Light Installations and Events Window with Fake Newspapers 20 East Cordova Street February 12 – March 21 Fillip magazine presents Dutch artist Mark Manders’ Window with Fake Newspapers, a site-specific installa- tion, and Traducing Ruddle, a freely distributed artist’s project in the form of a newspaper.

Signs, City Wall, City Path Suzhou Alley (off Carrall Street) and hoarding at Pender and Carrall Streets February 12 – March 21 The Helen Pitt Gallery presents a series of outdoor installations by local artists Jenipher Hur and Avery Nabata that humourously co-opts billboard marketing and offers a futuristic comment on architecture and urban planning.

Light Bar 33 West Cordova Street Blood Alley Multiple events from February 12 – March 20 The artist collective Instant Coffee presents a full-spectrum light bar installation and venue for light therapy, light lectures, light shows, light reading Art Gallery of Greater Victoria and light rock. Light Bar, 2009 Photo: Instant Coffee We Are Watching Jeffrey Boone Gallery—Suite 140, 1 East Cordova Street February 12 – March 21 The Jeffrey Boone Gallery presents Rina Liddle’s multi- component, participatory work dealing with private/ public space, surveillance and public art.

Procession of Performing Circles Parade route starts at Pender and Carrall Streets, proceeding along Powell and Columbia Streets, to Pender Street March 7, 7–9 pm Artist/curator Glenn Lewis and the producers of LIVE join forces with local performers, community members and dance and theatre groups for a ceremonial parade through the Downtown Eastside.

More info: www.bright-light.ca

19 Bright Light Installations and Events

Makeshift Makeshift Studio—8 East Cordova Street February 12 – 28, March 12 – 21 As part of her Makeshift clothing project, where for one year she is making all of her clothing by hand, artist Natalie Purschwitz will project images of her work onto her studio windows.

Fearless City—Bright Light edition W2 Café—Woodwards, 112 West Hastings Street W2 Culture + Media House, 149 West Hastings Street February 12 – March 21 W2 Community Media Art Society streams mobile video projections and text messages to encourage public input about the Downtown Eastside, its artworks and its environment.

Far, Up Close Interurban Gallery—1 East Hastings Street February 12 – March 21 The Interurban Gallery presents the exhibition Far, Up Close, featuring Time After by Chris Welsby; Portraits by Christoph Runne; and Specimen Plates by Monique Mees.

Natalie Purschwitz Makeshift, 2009

Git Hayetsk dancer Miquel Askren dancing Chiefs Head Dress song, 2007 Photo: Git Hayetsk Dancers

More info: www.bright-light.ca

20 Rafael Lozano-Hemmer Concept image, 2009 Vectorial Elevation Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

English Bay February 4 – 28, 2010

Vectorial Elevation, an award-winning installation created by Canadian artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, will create a quiet canopy of moving lights in the night sky above English Bay.

Viewers are invited to choreograph the installation’s 20 robotic lights over the Internet to create their own patterns. A personalized webpage will document each participant’s design. These captivating light sequences will be visible from 15 kilometres away; people around the world will also be able to watch a real-time video stream online. Designs will change every eight seconds, and it is estimated that 130,000 different patterns will illuminate the sky during the 24-day project.

Everyone is encouraged to participate online at www.vectorialvancouver.net, and www.vancouver2010. com/code.

Co-commissioned by the City of Vancouver and Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad, presented by Bell, with support from the Province of Quebec. Developed in consultation with the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation. Vectorial Elevation is part of CODE: the 2010 Cultural Olympiad’s digital edition, an 18-day digital arts event at venues and locations through- out the city beginning February 4, 2010.

More info: www.vectorialvancouver.net

21 Michael Lin, Georgia Street Plaza 23.01–02.05.10, 2010 Paint on aluminum panels Photo: Rachel Topham Vancouver Art Gallery

A Modest Veil Michael Lin

Vancouver Art Gallery—Georgia Street façade 750 Hornby Street January 23 – May 2, 2010

Well-known for his transformative site-specific installations, Taipei-based artist Michael Lin has been commissioned to create a massive mural for the Vancouver Art Gallery’s Georgia Street façade. The mural, which was hand-painted by local artists, features patterns and exuberant colours adapted from traditional Taiwanese designs.

The placement of Lin’s work on the Gallery’s exterior—the first presentation of his work in Canada—invites visitors to reconsider the building’s history and neo-classical architecture in a new light, while acknowledging the city’s diverse cultural traditions.

Michael Lin: A Modest Veil is organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and presented with Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad and the City of Vancouver Public Art Program. The exhibition is sponsored by Omega and supported by the Council for Cultural Affairs (Chinese Taipei) in collabora- tion with the Taipei Cultural Center of TECO in New York.

More info: www.vanartgallery.bc.ca

22 Guido Van Der Werve, Nummer acht: Everything is going to be alright [production still], 2007 Courtesy of Monitor Gallery, Rome; Gallery Juliette Jongma, Amsterdam; Marc Foxx, Los Angeles Photo: Ben Geraerts

CUE: Artists’ Videos

Vancouver Art Gallery—Robson Street façade 750 Hornby Street January 23 – March 21, 2010, 5 am to 2 am

CUE: Artists’ Videos presents seven thematic programs of video and film-based works by local, national and international artists. Featured on a large-scale LED screen that transforms the Gallery’s Robson Street façade into an outdoor exhibition space, this dynamic project includes some of the most innovative and compelling visual artists working with moving images today.

CUE is organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and presented with Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad and the City of Vancouver Public Art Program. It is funded by the Province of through the British Columbia Arts Council and supporting sponsor, Panasonic Canada Inc.

More info: www.vanartgallery.bc.ca

23 Vancouver 2010 Aboriginal Art in Venues

Developed by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games and the Four Host First Nations, the Vancouver 2010 Venues Aboriginal Art Program commis­ sioned artworks by First Nations, Inuit and Métis artists from across Canada. The City of Vancouver has supported welcome works that grace the entranceways of five 2010 Olympic and Paralympic venues.

Salish North Star in Maple Leaf Wade Baker Squamish Nation Southeast False Creek Plaza (Olympic Village) 1 Athletes Way

Chief Dan George Welcome Pole Zac George Tsleil-Waututh Pacific Coliseum 100 North Renfrew Street

Photo: Colin Priddle

24 Sacredness of Four Ray Natraoro Squamish Nation Trout Lake Centre Victoria Drive & East 19th Avenue

Photo: Vancouver Park Board

Photo: Vancouver Bright Futures Park Board Brent Sparrow, Musqueam Killarney Centre—6260 Killarney Street by 49th Avenue

Spindle Whorls Aaron Nelson-Moody, Squamish Nation Vancouver Olympic Centre/Vancouver Paralympic Centre at Hillcrest Park—575 Clancy Loranger Way

25 Art for the Senses Hear It Listen to the artists talk about their works and learn more by using your phone. Call our Mobile Audio Guide at 604.998.8038, and choose the artwork and artist you are interested in. Numbers for artworks that have an audio guide appear in this brochure at the bottom of each page, and on the map on page 28. Please note that roaming charges may apply. See It Look on our website for specially-commissioned short films about Olympic and Paralympic Public Art projects, which feature artist interviews: olympichostcity.vancouver.ca/cityhighlights/.

Knowledge, BC’s public educational broadcaster, will air the films on television during the winter months. Check your local listings for the channel or visit www.knowledge.ca. During February and March 2010, the films will also be aired on Air Canada’s Enroute TV. Find It You can find films, photos and more information about the Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program online. Visit the Creative City section of the Host City website at vancouver.ca, and the City of Vancouver Public Art page at vancouver.ca/publicart.

Join the City of Vancouver on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter: @CityofVancouver.

26 GO! Gallery: A Temporary Gallery for Permanent Change Rendering: Sean Pearson & Alyssa Schwann

Michael Lin, Georgia Street Plaza 23.01–02.05.10, 2010 paint on aluminum panels Photo: Rachel Topham, Vancouver Art Gallery

Geoffrey Farmer Every Letter In The Alphabet, 2009

27 A Nighthawk CRAB Park Bright Light B Passage 206 Carrall Street Waterfront C Light Bar Blood Alley A D Fearless City Burrard Inlet W2 at Woodwards Wa te r 149 West Hastings Street E We Are Watching 1 East Cordova Street B Powell C F Makeshift 8 East Cordova Street D E E Cordova G World Tea Party Stanley Park F N M Centre A D H H Far, Up Close Please note that some artworks have more E Hastings 1 East Hastings Street than one location. Artworks listed below in G J Go! J E Pender Yue Shan Courtyard red type and on the map with red dots have Lost Lagoon K K Signs

Abbott Suzhou Alley

Keefer Main

mobile audio guides. 1 Columbia L Brawl Lagoon Carrall Andy Livingstone Field L Georgia M Procession Robson Parade Route N Expo Blvd N Window with Fake Newspapers 1 Aerodynamic Forms in Space 20 East Cordova Georgia Street Entrance to Stanley Park Nelson CordovaThurlow Bridgeway BurrardWaterfront

Broughton Denman Gore 2 Walk In/Here You Are Haro Georgia Cambridge 16 Vancouver Central Library—North Plaza Penticton 24 Dundas Cardero Pendrell 12 Bute 3 The Words Don’t Fit The Picture 18 Dunlevy Powell English Bay 16 15 Cassiar Vancouver Central Library—South Plaza 19 16 Davie Smithe Hastings 15 Cambie Hastings Broughton 2 15 4 Vancouver Vancouver Vancouver 4 16 Burrard 14 Various locations Pacific 3 16 15 Clark

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Main Granville Jackson 5 Boulevard Davie 15 Venables McNicoll 17 Hamilton Street; Mainland Street; Cambie Street Malkin 6 Surface 5 Mainland William

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Alma V 2nd

Under Cambie Street Bridge 4th Burrard False Creek 13 4th 8 Ice Light 7 6th Main Gt Northern 6th 14

Vancouver City Hall 8th 5th

Renfrew 8th 6th Nanaimo 6th 6th Broadway Arbutus 10 9 Sensory Maps of Vancouver Broadway 8th Commercial

10th Broadway Carolina Various bus shelters 10th Broadway Lougheed

Cambie

Discovery 12th 12th 8 10 Monument for East Vancouver Grandview

Clark Clark Drive & East 6th Avenue Wallace

Glen

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Arbutus Various locations 29th

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Carnarvon 29th 15 Blue Nanaimo

Various locations Vanness 9 33rd 20 Rupert 16 Bright Light 9 14 33rd Slocan Downtown Eastside—various locations 36th Earles See inset 34th Marine 9

17 Vectorial Elevation Trafalgar

9 Joyce English Bay 41st 9 14 Kingsway 9 41st Clarendon

18 A Modest Veil d 41st Collingwood 41st 9 9 VancouverStrait Art Gallery of Marine

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Vivian Boundary 20 Spindle Whorls 49th Victoria Hillcrest Park 49th

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1 Athletes Way 54th Argyle West Blvd 53rd

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Ontario 54th 22 Sacredness of Four Elliott Matheson Trout Lake Rink 57th

Granville 57th Rosemont Park 23 Bright Futures Arbor BlakeChamplain Maquinna Killarney Rink & Community Centre ew Butler Y 61st Nanaimo Heather Scarboro ivian 62nd 24 Chief Dan George Welcome Pole Legend Art installation with mobile audio guide 63rd V Pacific Coliseum Bright Light art installation 63rd

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David MacWilliam Kingsway Luminaires, 2009 Photo: Scott Massey City of Vancouver Cultural Services

453 West 12th Avenue outsideVancouver, British back Columbia cover Canada V5Y 1V4 widthtel 604.871.6434 narrowed by 1/8” [email protected] olympichostcity.vancouver.ca/cityhighlights/