Witness blanket replica tours B.C. as testament to dark legacy of Indian residential schools - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 09:54 PM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Witness blanket replica tours B.C. as testament to dark legacy of Indian residential schools

Over the next year, people living in B.C.'s Interior and northwill be able to view the reproduction of a large-scale art installationcurrently touring museums across B.C. that commemorates the legacy of Indian residential schools.

Original installation created by Indigenous artist Carey Newman preserved at Winnipeg museum

This replica of the Witness Blanket is on display at the Kelowna Art Gallery until April 10. (Kelowna Art Gallery)

Over the next year, people living in B.C.'s Interior and northwill be able to view the reproduction of a large-scale art installationcurrently touring museums across B.C. that commemorates the legacy of Indian residential schools.

From Jan. 15 to April 10, the Kelowna Art Gallery is hosting the 12-metre long true-to-scale replica of TheWitness Blanket, which was created by Kwakwaka'wakwVancouver Island master carver Carey Newman, after which it willtravel to Prince Rupert and Prince George before heading to Whitehorse.

The original spent years touring the nation but is nowpreserved at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg. It contains hundreds of objects from Canada's residential schools, ranging frompieces of stained glass, to doors, to belts used to punish children.

The replica features the same cedar frames as the original, but instead of original artifacts it is made up ofphotographic panels that represent the more than 800 objects collected from 77 sites, including residential schools, across Canada.

Newman, who is also an arts professor at the University of Victoria, says he and the museum made an agreement in 2019 to become joint stewards of theWitness Blanket, and one of the projects they developed to protect the originalis to reproduce it for cross-country touring purposes.

"The original blanket was travelling for about four and a half years but the wear and tear from travel started to take its toll," he told Chris Walker on CBC's Daybreak South.

Another of the projects to preserve the Witness Blanket and make it available to remote communities is a virtual display, such as the one conducted by Camosun College on Vancouver Island in 2020.

Vancouver Island master carver Carey Newman says based on his stewardship agreement with the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg, they have developed projects to conserve the original Witness Blanket, including a virtual display. (CBC/Mike McArthur)

Newman says he came up with the idea to create a quilt-like installation in 2009 to honour his father, a residential school survivor, after the Truth and Reconciliation Commission called for initiatives to commemorate the legacy of people who had experienced racism in the institutions where children weren't allowed to speak their own languages.

Kelowna Art Gallery executive director Nataley Nagy says she has been wanting to exhibit TheWitness Blanket since its inception, because the artwork gives people space to think about Canada's residential school history.

"The blanket is a witness to the atrocities of the residential schools," she said on Daybreak South. "It's really important for people to have a quiet place to rest and to reflect."

More than 150,000 Indigenous children were forced into residential schools between 1870 and 1996.

With files from Daybreak South