Bear Hunt - Grande Prairie, Alberta
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member wildwoodke
N 55° 10.386 W 118° 47.459
11U E 385933 N 6115517
These bears, or portions of, are found in front of the old High School in Grande Prairie, Alberta.
Waymark Code: WMJG1N
Location: Alberta, Canada
Date Posted: 11/13/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member monkeys4ever
Views: 3

From the Art Gallery of Grande Prairie's website:
"Why are the bears here?
Bear Hunt is an outdoor sculpture installation located on the west side of the Art Gallery of Grande Prairie (103 Ave & 99 Street.) It is a preview for artist Dean Drever’s exhibition coming in September 2013.

Why are they bright orange?
Bright orange is a colour of caution and attention. It is a colour similar to the orange used for construction signs and high visibility safety clothing like those worn by hunters. The artist brings the attention back to the bear as a hunter of the forest that it is a powerful and potentially violent animal.

Dean Drever | Bear Hunt Artist Statement
Acid-orange bears move in communion, towards and through a wall, and disappear.

Their movement through space signifies transition, migration, change and loss. But what hope happens on the other side? How can standing alongside these animals show nature’s strength and seriousness — or our own vulnerabilities? The bears are at once benevolent and strong, but also distant and tragic.

Bears have no known predators; therefore they exist in a position of supreme power. Many cultures hold the bear as a symbol of purity, strength, dominance and authority. I am a member of the Haida nation. Haida culture believes that the bear is a supreme being, embodying both extraordinary physical and supernatural powers. The bear is protective and permanent; patient and full of fortitude. They show innocence along with a prodigious sense of responsibility. They eat with an unappeasable appetite and love to play.

By situating the bears diagonally through the space, the natural environment transforms into a kind of supernatural arena or a translation space between reality and myth. The wall is the membrane between two realms. Unnaturally bright colour accentuates a growing division between socio-cultural understandings of the natural world and the physicality of the natural world itself; the vibrancy cautions and calls to attention.

Bears exhibit an unchallenged potential for violence, giving form to forces of desire and repression present in contemporary intersections of language, myth, culture, and nature. The seduction of violence engages the complex relationship between complicit desire and unbounded power."

See: http://aggp.ca/news/have-you-seen-the-bears/

The display is worth a stop if you are close to the Art Gallery which is on the northeast side of downtown Grande Prairie. There is some free parking in front of the building and metered parking nearby.

Name of statue: Bear Hunt

Name of creator: Dean Drever

Material: fibreglass

Date created: 2013

Additional Coordinates: Not Listed

Visit Instructions:
A picture of the statue needs to be included, usually with a different view or views, but you do not have to be in the picture and you do not have to include your GPS device in the photo. Any additional information about the statue is welcome.

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Trail Blaisers wrote comment for Bear Hunt - Grande Prairie, Alberta 10/06/2015 Trail Blaisers wrote comment for it