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Public monuments shape how Canadians encounter their past. Yet the process of representing historical figures in bronze raises important questions: how does one preserve humanity, complexity, and context in a permanent public form? In this episode of History Matters, Allan Williams speaks with Ruth Abernethy, one of Canada’s most accomplished sculptors. Her public works include figures such as Glenn Gould, Oscar Peterson, Sir John A. Macdonald, and William Lyon Mackenzie King, among many others. The conversation traces her artistic development, from her early work building characters at the Stratford Festival to her first major public commission, Raising the Tent (1996), which marked the beginning of a distinguished career in public sculpture. Abernethy explains how her theatrical background informs her approach to historical representation. Rather than presenting idealized figures, her sculptures seek to portray individuals in moments of action and narrative attentive to personality, context, and human complexity. The discussion also examines lesser-known chapters of Canadian history reflected in her work, including Len Cullen’s influence on the gardens of Whitby, the legacy of Camp X and William Stephenson (“Intrepid”), and Nova Scotia figures such as Vernon Smith and Abraham Gesner, whose innovations connect whale oil, kerosene, and the early development of the modern energy industry. Throughout, Abernethy reflects on sculpture as a form of public storytelling shaped by placement, inscription, design, and historical interpretation. Listeners interested in public memory, Canadian identity, and the ways societies choose to commemorate their past will find this episode a thoughtful exploration of history in the public square. https://www.ruthabernethy.com/ Subscribe to History Matters on YouTube for more conversations with historians, authors, and cultural builders. Contact CIHE: info@cihe.ca