
Water is Medicine, Public Art
Rotary Frenchman’s Bay West Park and Beachfront Park, Pickering, ON
SpruceLab is working with The MBTW Group on the City of Rotary Frenchman’s Bay Park West and Beachfront Park to include Indigenous design elements. The revitalization of the parks will address the impact of major storms and high-water levels, while providing public realm access to the water. SpruceLab worked alongside Dbaajmowin, the Indigenous-led artists’ collective we initiated, to design and fabricate a large stainless steel public art sculpture for the site called Nbi Ayaa Mshkiki - “Water is Medicine” in Anishinaabemowin
Description by designers Jacques Baril and Karl Chevrier: “...SpruceLab’s basic proposal was very interesting, so we focused on other elements. In Karl’s speech, respect seems to be the most important notion, so we looked at how to represent the notion of respect in this context. The first aspect seems to come from the man/nature relationship and in this sense cedar has become an essential element in the construction of bark canoes, since all parts of the cedar are used. The roots seemed to us to be an important element in this symbiotic relationship. So I proposed to use a cedar branch as a starting point to illustrate the tree as such. Then the roots became part of the canoe as a strong link between the source of the material and the canoe. Thus the cedar branch becomes a tree that hugs the structure of the canoe. It was then thought that the roots could continue their way and form a portal to join the schooner. In these roots which intertwine and become a portal between the two worlds, the past and the present, elements such as a few round stones (symbolic of grandfathers and grandmothers) and perhaps a drum (spiritual guardian, reference to the past) could be inserted in the intertwined roots. These symbolic elements remain to be determined with the agreement of the first peoples.”
Learn more on our project sheet below
Services
Indigenous Engagement and Design
Public Art

signage

canoe portion

Opening

Opening toward shore

gate detail

Schooner detail