Vancouver Magazine
Bennies, Bubbly and Bites: Easter Weekend in Vancouver
April’s Best Food Events in Vancouver—Where to Dine This Month
EatWild Asks a Big Question: Is Hunting the Most Ethical Thing a Meat Eater Can Do?
6 Very Delicious Zero-Proof Cocktails to Try Next
Hit These Hot Happy Hours Before March is Over
10 Bottles to Make a Beeline For at This Weekend’s Winefest
Protected: Casino.org Helps B.C. Players Navigate Online Casinos with Confidence
Vancouver International Burlesque Festival Celebrates Two Decades of Showgirlship
This Leadership Conference Is on a Mission to Elevate More Women to Canada’s C-suites
5 Reasons to Visit Osoyoos This Spring
Indulge in a Taste of French Polynesia
Beyond the Beach: The Islands of Tahiti Are an Adventurer’s Dream
The Haul: Nettwerk Music Co-Founder Mark Jowett’s Magic Pen and Favourite Japanese Sneakers
15 Small, Independent Vancouver Brands to Shop Instead of the Shein Pop-Up
Inside the Whistler Wedding Venue Where Nature Elevates Elegance
Stanley Park is one of the city’s enduring attractions, but until recently many Vancouverites knew little about it. Most could tell you only that it’s among North America’s biggest urban parks. Books such as Timothy Taylor’s novel Stanley Park (2000) and Jean Barman’s Stanley Park’s Secret (2005), provide fictional and social histories, respectively, describing it as a site of human occupation, resistance and intrigue. (The 2001 homophobic murder of Aaron Webster, and the 2002 rape of a 22-year-old Korean language student, add further layers.) Yet it was not until December 15, 2006, that many people got to know the park for what it is-and what it is not.
That evening, a storm damaged up to 40 percent of the standing timber. In the weeks that followed, experts told us that the park was, in fact, an unnatural outcome, the product of civic officials unwilling to tamper with what some mistakenly believed to be a pristine forest; and that, had selective logging been allowed (as was proposed years earlier), many trees might have been saved.
An interesting proposition, and a starting point for artist Kevin Schmidt, who has devoted himself to exploring the fuzzy relationship between nature and culture. With a commission from Presentation House Gallery in North Vancouver, and permission from the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, Schmidt entered Prospect Point and, on a cut maple stump, painted a “trompe l’oeil” of West Vancouver. Once it was complete, he hired Blaine Campbell to take its picture. Two images were montaged together, creating a photograph of the “en plein air” painting that achieves a weird surreality.
Vancouver is renowned for its painters and photographers. Jack Shadbolt abstracted the natural landscape, while the canvases of Gordon Smith have, at various times, brought the city into view. Photo-based artist Jeff Wall has had a long-standing fascination with our suburbs, while his protégé, Roy Arden, documents the effects of modernity on the civic skin. Schmidt’s accomplishment lies not only in his merging of our city’s artistic histories, but in his sly way of reminding us, rather forcefully, that the only thing “natural” about Stanley Park is the storm that ravaged it.
The editorial team at Vancouver magazine is obsessed with tracking down great food and good times in our favourite city on earth. Email us pitches at [email protected].
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week, and you’ll be entered to win a Nanoleaf Renter Bundle, which includes 1 x Smart Multicolor Floor Lamp and 1 x Smart Multicolor Lightstrip.
These lights have customizable colours, can react to the beat or your music and can be controlled through an app. Prize value is $200 CAD.
Each newsletter subscription = 1 entry. Giveaway closes February 28. 2026. The winner will be contacted by an @canadawide.com email. The contest is only open to Canadian residents, excluding Quebec.