Vancouver's Trans Am Totem saved by $250K donation from Chip and Shannon Wilson - Action News
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Vancouver's Trans Am Totem saved by $250K donation from Chip and Shannon Wilson

The Trans Am Totem has been saved by a $250,000 donation from Chip and Shannon Wilson, though the final destination for the art piece still needs to be decided.

Couple donated to Vancouver Biennale, Biennale gave art to city

The Trans Am Totem was built by Vancouver artist Marcus Bowcott and his wife, Helene Aspinall, specifically for its location in False Creek in 2015. It's now been donated to the City of Vancouver. (CBC)

The Trans Am Totem has been saved by a $250,000 donation from Chip and Shannon Wilson, though the final destination for the art piece still needs to be decided.

Artist Marcus Bowcott and his wife, Helene Aspinall, created the sculpture,comprised of five refinished scrap cars stacked on top of an old-growth cedar tree,specifically for its current location near the Georgia Viaductin 2015 but because it was made as part of a Vancouver Biennale public art exhibition, it was only scheduled for a two-year run.

The city extended that timeline an extra two years, but that period ended in September.

The Biennalehas beenworking for months to confirm the Wilsons' donation and save the art piece. The paperwork was finalizedon Monday.

Artist Marcus Bowcott who created the Trans Am Totem pictured in March 2018. (CBC)

Barrie Mowatt, founder and president of the Biennale, said the exhibitionbought the totem with the Wilsons' donation and then donated it to the city under a 10-year tenure.

"Our philosophy really is about transforming public space through creating museum-calibre installations that really speak to the times," Mowattsaid."With each Biennale, we try to retain at least one major work in each of the communities in which we are."

Chip Wilson is the multi-billionaire founder of LululemonAthleticaand a property holder in Vancouver, who hasdonated before to support the Biennale's public art.

A-maze-ing Laugher, an art installation comprised of 14 bronzed structures, was built in Vancouver's West End nearly a decade ago. (Credit: Instagram/@finncorner96)

In 2012, he donated $1.5 million to A-maze-ing Laughter, an installationcomprised of 14 statues of laughing men on the corner of Denmanand Davie Streets in the city's west end. The bronze sculpture was in jeopardy because it was only on loan from the artist, Yue Minjun, as part of the biannual art exhibition during the 2010 Olympics.

Wilson and his wife funded the VancouverPark Board's purchase of the statuesafter thesculptor dropped his $5 million asking price.

Thosestatues have remained in their original place, but the Trans Am Totem will eventually need to move because of the city's 20-year planto revitalize the northeast False Creek area which includes tearing down the Georgia Viaduct and developing the surrounding area.

Mowatt said there's no "immediate movement" on talks to find a new home for the totem just yet.

"Not until the city comes back and tells us they have a date for demolition [on the revitalization project], because, as you and I know, that could happen in six months or six years," he said.