'Travelling Light'

A controversial blue hoop has been puzzling freeway drivers since 2013.

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Picture a map, with acircle designed to draw your eye to a particular place. That shape is telling you where to look. Now imagine it rendered in 3D, and plopped down on a freeway bridge. That’s what’s going on with a massive, wheel-shaped streetlamp inCalgary.

Standingroughly 55 feet tall, the steel hoop, which is formally known as “Travelling Light,” is the blue of an impossibly clear sky. It frames the landscape behind it, as though you’re looking through a viewfinder. The work was conceptualized by the Berlin-based collectiveinges idee, and built and installed by local companies. The wheel was completed in 2013, and has been inciting puzzlement and a dash of ire ever since.

这个项目被th资助e city’s public art initiative, and the nearly half-a-million dollar price tag left some citizens bristling. “Some still see red over giant blue ring,” theCalgary Heraldreportedin 2016. A handful of locals grumbled to newspapers that the project was an eyesore, and either overly simplistic or the exact opposite: Itstruck them as eithera big circle, plain and simple, or else something so lofty and profound that it was utterly inaccessible. In 2015, one resident tweeted aphoto of a jumbled heap of office chairs, and joked that that sculpture was an improvement over the blue ring. Even the mayor told reporters that the hoop was “awful” and “terrible,” according to theHerald, and a former alderman told the paper that the installation was a colossal “waste of money” that “makes me sick every time I see it.”

Public art isn’t always popular, but it often gets people talking, and nudges them to see their surroundings in a different way. Look at the hoop, or peer through it, and make up your own mind about what you see.

Know Before You Go

The hoop sits near one of the interchanges between Airport Trail and Deerfoot Trail.



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