Do you think it was fashioned as a sundial or just seems to function as one.
I do like the creative form of the earth o. It’s a is.
Asher
Hello Asher
Two of these exist in the city of Vancouver the one shown in the pic is at the Vandusen Garden.
Artist(s)
Gerhard Class
Artwork information
Program:Gift
Installed:1967
Primary materials bronze, stone, granite
Type:Sculpture
Status:In place
Owner:City of Vancouver
Description of work
A classic bronze sundial sits on top of a 4'5" high rectangular granite pedestal engraved with abstract modernist geometric designs. A second edition of the sundial was commissioned for the VanDusen Gardens around 1972.
Artist statement
Erected under the auspices of the Centennial Committee of Vancouver in cooperation with the Parks Board, the sculpture was presented to the City by Cunningham Drug Stores Ltd. whose first store was opened at Denman and Nelson Streets in 1911. The inscription reads, " I mark my hours by shadow, mayest thou mark thine by sunshine." The sundial commemorates three English "greenhorns" - Samual Brighouse, John Morton, and William Hailstone who in 1862 filed the first land claim and planned the first home and industry in the then heavily wooded area now bounded by Burrard Inlet, Stanley Park, English Bay and Burrard Street to which they received title in 1867.
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Best, regards
James