A UNIQUE piece of artwork representing people uniting as one was revealed at the Greenbank RSL Club last Wednesday.
About 70 people attended a ceremony held by the Greenbank RSL sub-branch to mark the installation of Gallipoli's Mirage, a sculpture consisting of 50 six metre metal poles.
When viewed from the front the poles form an image of men in battle, while from the side the poles can be viewed as individual pieces of art.
The sculpture's creator, Tamborine Mountain artist Jacques van der Merwe, spoke at the ceremony, saying he was thankful to be given the opportunity to create a sculpture commemorating the Anzac centenary.
"If you stand together you can achieve more and that is basically the whole idea of the sculpture," he said.
"Each pole is like a separate person, an individual being and together when all of the individual people stand together they form an image that translates into something meaningful."
Division Seven Councillor Laurie Smith, who worked with the sub-branch to turn his Anzac centenary commemoration idea into reality, said Gallipoli's Mirage would serve as a lasting tribute to the Anzacs.
"This image continues to shout to the world the statement made by those who landed at Anzac Cove on the 25th April 1915 that we are no longer a colonial outpost, we are a nation of people who value and will protect our way of life, our freedom, our democracy and our freedom of speech," he said.
Greenbank RSL sub-branch president Barry Macdonald said Gallipoli's Mirage belonged to the people of Logan and would be carefully cared for by the RSL.
"It's a one-of-a-kind sculpture and a very special way to remember the Anzacs," he said.