Public Art Registry
Time Immemorial
Artwork has been removed.
Photo: Rachel Topham
Time Immemorial - photo by Rachel Topham
Time Immemorial - photo by Rachel Topham
Time Immemorial - photo by Rachel Topham
350 West Georgia Street
Vancouver Public Library (Central Branch)
In the atrium
The artwork has been removed from this location.
Civic
2017
Two-dimensional artwork
No longer in place
City of Vancouver
Canada 150+
Banner
Description of work

The City of Vancouver, as part of its Canada 150+ program, commissioned a series of six paint and print murals created by Indigenous artists and artist teams. The public art is part of the City’s ongoing commitment to reconciliation and strengthening of relations between Indigenous communities and Vancouverites.

The murals, banners and transparencies were commissioned as part of the City of Vancouver's commemoration of the sesquicentennial of Canada's confederation. Vancouver refocused the national celebration on its indigenous peoples and First Nations, who long precede confederation, and whose resurgence will continue long past the anniversary--hence "150+".

The public art program issued a call for murals in January 2017. The six successful applicant teams were reviewed and chosen by a selection panel of Indigenous artists and art professionals.

The projects were realized throughout the city centre, including projects at the central library, Queen Elizabeth Theatre and its plaza, the headhouse of a Canada Line station, a laneway on the Downtown Eastside, and the lot where the Kanata Fest and the Drum Is Calling Festival were held.

Works variously drew from Coast Salish, formline, and Woodland School forms, presented portraits mixing contemporary and traditional clothing and regalia, and collaged photographic images into abstracted compositions.

Commissioned in the spirit of Reconcilation, the project served to increase Indigenous visibility on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Nations now known as Vancouver.

Artist statement

The banners focus on the multi-faceted identity of Vancouver's First Nations by displaying the people through images that characterize aboriginal values, such as knowledge, tradition and family. It also serves as social commentary for the present position of Indigenous people living in an urban landscape. All of the models for these drawings live in the city of Vancouver and represent people form nations within and around Vancouver such as those from the Bella Coola, Musqueam, Haida, Squamish and Lilooet nations.

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