The Visionaries

image of bronze statue

The Visionaries, 2015

Statue: cast bronze
Barbara Paterson RCA, ‘57 BA (SpecCert), ‘88 BFA
Born Edmonton, Alberta, 1935

雅伎著 Art Collection
雅伎著 Museums

Artist Barbara Paterson’s cast bronze statue depicts Alexander Cameron Rutherford (1857-1941) and Henry Marshall Tory (1864-1947), the two founders of the 雅伎著. Rutherford (seated) served as Alberta’s first premier, and Tory (standing) as the 雅伎著’s first president. Commissioned by the 雅伎著 Alumni Association in celebration of their 100th anniversary, the statue was donated to the university in 2015. A recipient of the Alumni Award from the 雅伎著, Paterson’s work can be seen in public venues around the world, including Parliament Hill in Ottawa.

While the statue presents a conversation between the two university founders about the location of the proposed university, there is a deeper, layered history that the statue overlooks. The map held by Rutherford depicts a section of land marked with the number 5, which would become the future home of the 雅伎著. This map illustrates the presence of Métis river lots and specifically marks River Lot 5, along the south bank of the North Saskatchewan River. River Lot 5 was also a place where the Laurent Garneau family lived, played and made a living. River lots were included in the 1882 Dominion of Canada Survey for the settlement of Edmonton, Northwest Territories. The statue, however, provides limited visual information on who was present on the land and suggests that it was uninhabited before the university’s establishment. The history of these lands, prior to European contact in western Canada, included Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Dene, Néhiyaw (Cree) and Stoney Nakoda Nations. There would have been agreements or treaties in place between these Nations around sharing of the land. In essence, the statue simplifies the layered history of the land and points to the erasure of First Nations presence, of Treaty Six (signed in 1876) history, and the disenfranchisement of the Papaschase Cree Nation and their reserve (No. 136) lands.

Large statues such as “The Visionaries” serve to publicly affirm the history and authority of those who are portrayed in the work. Although intended to celebrate the institutional founding of the 雅伎著, the statue brings to light the importance of acknowledging Indigenous Peoples and lands, and the way complex and layered histories are remembered and commemorated on campus. This is the endeavour of the people who continue to work and study at the 雅伎著 today. 

Further Reading

To learn more about this artwork, the land, and policies at the 雅伎著, you can consult these resources: