Dallas Road Variations

Description

A bronze plaque bearing a sonnet by John Barton, Victoria’s Poet Laureate from 2019–2022. Facing the Salish Sea, the poem celebrates this stunning viewpoint, capturing the sounds, movements, air currents, and changing light. 

 

Artist statement

Against the backdrop of the natural world, “Dallas Road Variations” evokes the private and shared moments people experience along the Victoria waterfront over the course of a single day. The fourteen quickly moving lines of this sonnet (which means “little song”) pack in as much detail as they are capable of holding—joggers, driftwood, pebbles, floatplanes, cormorants—while the sun rises and sets. Like every other day, this day is full and brief. 

“Dallas Road Variations,” like many sculptures, is site specific. The plaque is located exactly in the spot where I imagined myself standing while writing at my desk, blocks away, in my home in the heart of James Bay. Its textures almost perfectly represent recurring aspects of my regular walks by the water. While no rain happens to fall during this particular poem, it may in another. Line by line, its music echoes the meditative wash of the tide as it rises and falls from shore. 

About the artist
John Barton

John Barton has published thirteen books and ten chapbooks of poetry, a collection of essays, and several anthologies, including Seminal: Canada’s Gay Male Poets (with Billeh Nickerson) and Best Canadian Poetry 2023. He edited two major Canadian literary magazines: Arc (1988–2003) and The Malahat Review (2004–2018). His library and publishing career includes positions at five national museums in Ottawa and editing Vernissage for the National Gallery of Canada. He has taught poetry at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity and the University of Victoria, led writing workshops across Canada, and held residencies at Saskatoon Public Library, the University of New Brunswick, and Memorial University of Newfoundland. He has won several awards, including three Archibald Lampman Awards, an Ottawa Book Award, a National Magazine Award, and a CBC Literary Award. His poems and essays appear in magazines and anthologies worldwide. 

Born in Edmonton and raised in Calgary, John lives in Victoria, where he was Poet Laureate from 2019 to 2022. He is a life member of the League of Canadian Poets. His most recent book, Compulsory Figures was published in 2025. His eleventh chapbook, Labyrinth, is forthcoming in 2026. 

Visit John Barton's website 

Details
Artwork type
Site Integrated
Medium
Bronze
Dimensions
50.8 cm × 40.64 cm (1 ft 8 in × 1 ft 4 in)
Site
Holland Point Shoreline Trail, on retaining wall below main Dallas Road walkway near Lewis Street.
Artwork category
Civic Public Art
Community
Victoria
Date unveiled
October 20 2025
Location
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Territorial Acknowledgement

The CRD conducts its business within the Territories of many First Nations, all of whom have a long-standing relationship with the land and waters from time immemorial that continues to this day. Statement of Reconciliation