Yellowknife mural back on display, 4 years after it was left in a pile of gravel - Action News
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Yellowknife mural back on display, 4 years after it was left in a pile of gravel

A beloved mural by Yellowknife artist Walt Humphries is back on display outside Stanton Territorial Hospital more than four years after a pair of hikers found it lying in a pile of gravel.

Artist Walt Humphries glad new audience will get to see his painting

Man stands beside Mural
Walt Humphries says he is glad to see his 1992 mural is back on display outside Stanton Territorial Hospital, four years after a friend found it face-up in a pile of gravel behind the building. (Jared Monkman/CBC)

A beloved mural by Yellowknife artist Walt Humphries is back on display outside Stanton Territorial Hospital more than four years after a pair of hikers found it lying in a pile of gravel.

Humphries told CBC he was "a bit surprised", but happy, to see the mural back up when he was at the hospital for a blood test on Thursday.

"Four years had gone by and someone decided to put it back up," he said. "When you create an image, and you put it out there, you never know where it's going to go or what it's going to show up as or how it's going to be used. But that's what art's all about."

Humphries painted the 8.5 metre by 2.5 metre mural for the hospital in 1992 donating his labour for free. After many years on display, it was taken down while the hospital was being renovated around seven years ago.

He assumed it was safely in storage until 2020, when a friend found it lying faceup in a pile of gravel behind the hospital, looking like it had been left out for years.

Bearded man stands beside mural lying faceup on gravel
Walt Humphries examining his damaged mural after it was discovered sitting on a pile of gravel in May of 2020. (Sara Minogue/CBC)

After Humphries confronted the government, theypromised that it would be restored, stored properly and put back on display when construction at the hospital was finished but Humphries hadn't heard anything about those plans in years.

Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority spokesperson David Maguire said the mural could not be reinstated until construction around the Stanton Territorial Hospital site was finished.

"The plan was to reinstate the mural after site works were complete so residents could once again enjoy this community artwork created by Walt Humphries," he told CBC in an email.

"We are happy to see the Mural back on the campus of care we have created with Stanton Territorial Hospital and the wegat facility."

Young-ish man paints a large wooden mural
Walt Humphries poses with the mural he worked on in the early 1990s. (Submitted by Walt Humphries)

When Humphries looks at the mural now, he said it seems as much a historical artifact as an artwork. Looking at the painting makes him think about how the territory has changed since he first painted it in 1992.

But his hopes for the artwork are the same as they have always been to give hospital patients and their loved ones who are struggling "a little sparkle for their day."

"Hopefully it will be here for another few decades," he said.

With files from Jared Monkman and Jenna Dulewich