Shore to Shore Stanley Park Dr, Vancouver, BC V6G 3E2

Shore to Shore





7 Reviews
  • WednesdayOpen 24 hours
  • ThursdayOpen 24 hours
  • FridayOpen 24 hours
  • SaturdayOpen 24 hours
  • SundayOpen 24 hours
  • MondayOpen 24 hours
  • TuesdayOpen 24 hours




Shore to Shore Stanley Park Dr, Vancouver, BC V6G 3E2




About the Business

Shore to Shore :: the sculpture | a public sculpture by Coast Salish artist Luke Marston in Stanley Park, Vancouver, Canada

Contacts

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Stanley Park Dr, Vancouver, BC V6G 3E2

Hours

  • WednesdayOpen 24 hours
  • ThursdayOpen 24 hours
  • FridayOpen 24 hours
  • SaturdayOpen 24 hours
  • SundayOpen 24 hours
  • MondayOpen 24 hours
  • TuesdayOpen 24 hours

Features

  • Wheelchair-accessible entrance




Recommended Reviews

Dade Brandon
18.08.2023
Shore to Shore
There are lots of little things to see in this area.A swarm of wasps was inhabiting the nearby water fountain, which has been pooled with water for at least the past two weeks.
Benjamin Bahmann
24.07.2023
Shore to Shore
Shore to shore is a Sculpture by Stz’uminus Master Carver, and Ts’uts’umult Luke Marston. The sculpture was carved in cedar and then cast in bronze is a tribute to the ancestral connection between this area’s aboriginal and Portuguese communities. It is a nice sculpture from two women and a men.
Louise Boilevin
16.07.2023
Shore to Shore
Unveiled in 2015, shore to shore , by Coast Salish master carver Luke Marston (Ts’uts’umutl), Artist Luke Marston is the great-great-grandson of Portuguese Joe and Kwatleemaat. was also the first sculpture depicting historical female figures in a Vancouver park. Shore to Shore is a tribute to Portuguese adventurer Joe Silvey (“Portuguese Joe”). A whaler, fisherman and one-time Gastown saloon-keeper who migrated here around 1858 from the Portuguese Azorean island of Pico He was born and raised on Portugal’s Altantic Azores Islands, though after several adventures, Joe found himself on the Pacific, in Vancouver’s Gastown. He married into the native community here . His first wife Khaltinaht, a Musqueam noblewoman who died of tuberculosis at a young age, leaving two childrenSilvey’s second wife, Kwatleematt of the Sechelt First Nation, with whom Silvey had nine more children . Silvey and Khaltinaht, and later Kwatleematt, lived in a mixed-race community in Xwayxway /Stanley park at Brockton Point, near where the sculpture is located, until the family moved to Reid Island around 1878 to escape growing racism. I think its important for everyone to visit this sculpture if your a local or a tourist its a must see to honor and respect and admire. Its location is right next to the totem poles on the south side .

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Stanley Park Dr, Vancouver, BC V6G 3E2
Shore to Shore