Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Love is Already in the Air at Newly Installed Love Locks!

Vancouver Park Board, 07 Sep, 2016 12:16 PM
  • Love is Already in the Air at Newly Installed Love Locks!
  • Love is Already in the Air at Newly Installed Love Locks!
  • Love is Already in the Air at Newly Installed Love Locks!
< >
A young Surrey couple has ‘locked in’ their love at Vancouver Park Board’s new sculpture dedicated to eternal love.
 
Arvinder Gill and Sukhdeep Uppal is the first couple to declare their love with an engraved padlock at the love locks sculpture in Queen Elizabeth Park. The sweethearts also got engaged at the sculpture.
 
“I expect this striking public art will delight residents and visitors alike as it’s beautiful and interactive,” said Vancouver Park Board Chair Sarah Kirby-Yung. “Public art is important because it creates engaging spaces in our parks and cities.”
 
Gill contacted the Park Board to enquire about the completion of the love locks sculpture so they could be the first to get a padlock locked onto it.
 
“I read a news story about the sculpture and thought it would be a memorable way for me and Sukhdeep to express our love,” said Gill. “I proposed at the love locks on September 5th, Sukhdeep accepted and then we added our love lock.”
 
The Park Board approved the steel sculpture of four entwined couples entitled ‘Love in the Rain’ at a meeting in May. The piece is designed by Vancouver artist Bruce Voyce and celebrates the shelter that love brings and the union that it forms. Love has no boundaries and therefore the human forms in the sculpture have been left both ageless and genderless, locked together in an everlasting embrace.
 
“I feel that art has transformative power; it can open our minds and hearts. Public art can shape our shared spaces into places of inspiration and connection. I feel very fortunate to be involved with a project that will be completed by the people and stories of love connected to the artwork.” said Voyce.
 
The $50,000 sculpture adds a new public artwork to city parks and addresses concerns raised about the number of love locks being attached to fencing on the Burrard Bridge and sites in southeast False Creek. The sculpture is seen as a way to focus the locks in one place, rather than have them accumulate around the city.
 
The sculpture is located in the lookout above the Quarry Garden near Bloedel Conservatory at the top of Queen Elizabeth Park. It will support several thousand locks on the skirts of each couple. Keys can be deposited in a box on site and will eventually be recycled or melted down to become part of another sculpture.
 
Queen Elizabeth Park was chosen as a home for the sculpture after the Park Board polled the public on where they would like to see it installed.
 
Love locks are padlocks that romantic partners have traditionally locked to a bridge, gate, or similar public fixture to show their love. Names or initials are typically inscribed on the padlock, and its key is thrown away to symbolize an unbreakable bond.
 
Photo credit: Fine Pixel Studio

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Tokyo Zoo To Work On Changing Living Conditions For Aging Elephant

Tokyo Zoo To Work On Changing Living Conditions For Aging Elephant
An animal welfare expert recommended simple additions to Hanako's pen including infrared heaters and new toys instead of moving her to a sanctuary.

Tokyo Zoo To Work On Changing Living Conditions For Aging Elephant

Watch: This Is You Wear Pants Without Using Hands

Watch: This Is You Wear Pants Without Using Hands
The boy, in the video posted by Comedy Keeda that has gone viral, will teach you how to do that while shaking a leg and well, body too.

Watch: This Is You Wear Pants Without Using Hands

Meet 16-Months-Old Baby Girl Who Waves 'Hi' To Everyone She Meets

Meet 16-Months-Old Baby Girl Who Waves 'Hi' To Everyone She Meets
Joey is a 16-months-old baby who just wants to spread smiles. 

Meet 16-Months-Old Baby Girl Who Waves 'Hi' To Everyone She Meets

Does Your 11-Year-Old Drink Alcohol?

Does Your 11-Year-Old Drink Alcohol?
Can you imagine an 11-year-old picking up a beer bottle? Scientists have now found that one in seven 11-year-olds in Britain has drunk more than a "few sips of alcohol" at least once -- nearly 14 percent.

Does Your 11-Year-Old Drink Alcohol?

White House Veteran Offers Advice On How Justin Trudeau Can Capitalize On US Celebrity

 A veteran of the Obama White House who specialized in international outreach says Canada's rookie prime minister has an extremely rare opportunity for a foreign leader: the chance to be heard by Americans.

White House Veteran Offers Advice On How Justin Trudeau Can Capitalize On US Celebrity

New York Teenager Pens A Moving Post To Find His Biological Father

New York Teenager Pens A Moving Post To Find His Biological Father
Jette Collins, an 18-year old residing in New York, is looking for his biological father just ‘to meet’ him and nothing else. 

New York Teenager Pens A Moving Post To Find His Biological Father