Wind, Water, Light

2 February 2025 – Let’s hop back a few days.

Let’s ignore this morning’s sloppy snow (cleared from the fern by my loving fingers but slumping off the chair all by itself)…

and let’s ignore yesterday’s sullen drizzle that had this would-be patron waiting in vain for someone to open up the Espresso Bar at False Creek and start serving coffee.

Let’s instead revisit January 29.

It is a breezy-clear day that rewards a walk along the Coal Harbour stretch of Burrard Inlet — even if afternoon light is already fading by the time I reach this installation, which overlooks the Vancouver Harbour Flight Centre from its spot beside Vancouver Convention Centre West.

I’ve seen it before, always liked it a lot, but today, I pay more attention to it. I start reading the signage. I learn the artist is Vancouverite Doug R. Taylor, who has “a passion for building whimsical mobiles that reflect the storyline of a site.”

The more I read, the more I understand what this means. And understand there’s more going on here than artistic whimsy.

The site, in fact, is directly opposite, not here — past the float plane activity, over there on the north shore where sulphur piles mark one of the many terminals that comprise the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority.

What we have on this side, in this Wind Wheel Mobile, is a memorial to the workers who loaded asbestos over there for so many years.

This mobile is Taylor’s way of working with that history, and those consequences.

I give it a moment, I do, and then I walk on.

I am almost immediately captivated by another storyline — this one created by the dance between the two sites now in front of me. Orange harbour cranes, down there on the left, bounce a fiery explosion across Convention Centre windows, here on the right.

I keep walking, treat myself to a closer look at the reflection, which by now has only the peaks of Convention Centre East to play with. (Plus one swooping gull.)

And then, very well satisfied with wind, water and light, I go on home.

To wait for the snow.

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4 Comments

  1. restlessjo's avatar

    We can be very careless of human life at times… I didn’t take to the installation as much as the flame coloured reflection, but I can’t fault the reason for its existence.

    Reply
    • icelandpenny's avatar

      In fact Wind Wheel isn’t a static installation, it is a mobile and all its whirly-gigs whirl madly in the breeze. Unfortunately, I’m not at the WP level that allows me to import one of my own videos (I just discovered(, so all I could show you was a still photo. But… I’m with you, that flame-reflection was my favourite as well

      Reply
      • restlessjo's avatar

        Not sure, but you may still be able to insert from You Tube, by copy and paste? That’s all I do.

      • icelandpenny's avatar

        I’ve just embedded a YouTube, no problem with that. I’m betting YouTube & the other commercial sites pay WP for embedding privileges, whereas WP gets nothing when I embed my own — unless I pay by subscribing at a higher WP level. Oh well! Not one of life’s big problems, as big problems go.

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  • WALKING… & SEEING

    "Traveller, there is no path. Paths are made by walking" -- Antonio Machado (1875-1939)

    "The voyage of discovery is not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes" -- Marcel Proust (1871-1922)

    "A city is a language, a repository of possibilities, and walking is the act of speaking that language, of selecting from those possibilities" -- Rebecca Solnit, "Wanderlust: A History of Walking"

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