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The Secwépemc Landmarks project team (photo by Bernadette Dennis, Adams Lake Communications / Shuswap Trail Alliance)
First Nations Sculpture

Landmark sculpture to be installed at park

Oct 14, 2022 | 8:30 AM

A First Nation sculpture will be unveiled in the Shuswap this fall.

The Secwépemc Landmarks project team will unveil the Tsqúqw7e Landmark sculpture in Tsqúqw7e (Chase Memorial Park), at 1 p.m. on Nov. 16.

The project was created by the late Mike “Savage” Peters, assisted by his son, Lone White Wolf Peters, and completed by Shayne D. Hunt and David Jacob Harder.

The installation of the sculpture is dedicated to the memory of Michael Alexander Peters, one of the two original artists.

The art item is shaped in the form of a Coyote Rock, representing rock formations created by Sek̓lép, Sk̓lap, or Senxúxwlecw (Coyote). It involves metalwork in the shape of tree food cashes used to store dried roots and salmon. The sculpture is also adorned with carvings to represent the oral histories shared by the Secwépemc Elders Advisory Committee.

Along with the installation of the Tsqúqw7e Landmark sculpture, the Secwépemc Landmarks project team is working to install trailhead posts carved by area youth under the guidance of Kenthen Thomas. Approximately 200 youth have carved just under 100 trailhead posts, which are to be installed on trail systems throughout the Shuswap Lakes region of the Secwepemcúl̓ecw

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