The Vegreville Egg, a giant (world's largest) sculpture of a pysanka, a Ukrainian-style Easter egg. Vegreville, Alberta, Canada.
Image details
Contributor:
Felix Choo / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
E4TJ70File size:
34.9 MB (1.1 MB Compressed download)Releases:
Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?Dimensions:
4032 x 3024 px | 34.1 x 25.6 cm | 13.4 x 10.1 inches | 300dpiDate taken:
28 June 2014Location:
Elk's Park, Vegreville, Alberta, CanadaMore information:
The Vegreville egg is a giant sculpture of a pysanka, a Ukrainian-style Easter egg. It is the largest pysanka in the world. The work is built of an intricate set of anodized aluminum two-dimensional tiles congruent equilateral triangles and star-shaped hexagons fashioned over an aluminum framework. The egg is 31 ft (9 m) long and three and a half stories high, weighing in at 2.5 t (5, 512 lb). Located in Vegreville, a town in Alberta, Canada, the sculpture was designed by Paul Maxum Sembaliuk (1929–present), a Canadian artist of Ukrainian descent who was born and raised in the Willingdon / Vegreville area. The egg (pysanka) was commissioned by the town of Vegreville. In order to obtain funding for the egg, the town applied for a federal government grant and was eventually able to obtain some funding, but only if the egg was dedicated to the 1975 centennial of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Vegreville received a grant to construct the egg, a nod at Ukrainian culture in Canada, and specifically at early Ukrainian settlements east of Edmonton. *** Description sourced from Wikipedia.