British Columbia

Earls penguin lookalike usurps Satan statue at Grandview Cut park

A tribute to well-dressed penguins has been installed at a small park site off Clark Drive, on a pedestal that became known weeks ago after a provocative devil statue was erected there.

Christopher Columbus 'The Dreamer' statue was removed from pedestal by rogue art relocators in 2000

Rogue penguin art installation

10 years ago
Duration 0:48
Weeks after a red devil statue is erected at a forgotten plaza, a penguin takes centre stage

A tribute to well-dressed penguins has been installed at a small park site off Clark Drive, on a pedestal in a plaza that became more widely known weeks ago after a provocative devil statue was erected there.

The City of Vancouver was quick to remove the red devil statue, whose anatomical features shocked some SkyTrain passengers and lit up discussions on Twitter.

Peguin wearing shades on your pedestal? Deal with it. (CBC)

It wasn't clear on Tuesday who placed the penguin statue — which bears a striking similarity to the once-populous Earls Restaurant penguins — in the plaza, nor whether the city was also going to remove it.

But what is this abandoned-looking plaza whose pedestal seems to cry out to guerilla artists — and possible mid-90s relic hoarders — to try and fill its void?

In 2006, as The Vancouver Courier reported, a researcher seeking to uncover the origins of the forgotten-looking plaza and pedestal on Clark Drive discovered it once housed a bronze statue of Christopher Columbus.

A commemorative statue that represents Christopher Columbus as a boy was originally installed in the small plaza at Clark Drive near North Grandview Highway. (Barbara Cole/City of Vancouver public art database)

The statue, called The Dreamer, was erected in 1986 in the plaza, which was one of a dozen or more small park sites that sprung up along the then-new SkyTrain line and what was intended to be a pedestrian-and-cycle-friendly parkway system.

Years went by and the plaza on the truck-heavy corridor became neglected, until one night in 2000, the Columbus statue was taken.

It reappeared months later in the Italian Garden at Hastings Park.

The pedestal has remained empty — except for temporary rogue art installations — ever since.

Google Maps: Forgotten memorial plaza

With files from the CBC's Rhiannon Coppin