The Witness Blanket (Level 6 - Expressions)

December 15, 2015 to June 25, 2016

This exhibition has passed.

Portion of a large artwork consisting of objects set in cedar frames. Partially obscured.

Photo: Courtesy of Carey Newman

Exhibition details

This exhibition has ended, but you can see Witness Blanket: Preserving a Legacy in the Level 1 gallery from April 30, 2021 to January 16 2022.

Inspired by a woven blanket, this large‐scale art installation by Carey Newman is made from pieces of history – hundreds of items reclaimed from residential schools, churches, government buildings, and other cultural structures all across Canada.

Contributions to the Witness Blanket were donated by residential school survivors and their families, band offices, friendship centres and governments. Other items were reclaimed from former residential school sites. Those responsible for the school system – churches and the Canadian federal government – have also donated pieces for this installation as a gesture towards reconciliation.

More than 800 items from 77 communities were gathered for this artwork. They include letters, photos, stories, books, clothing, art and fragments of buildings.

A large horizontal art installation with a wooden frame made up of multiple diamonds and rectangles to which many objects are mounted. There is a half-opened door in the middle of the work.

The Witness Blanket stands as a national monument to recognize the atrocities of the Indian residential school era, honour the children and symbolize ongoing reconciliation.

Photo: CMHR, Jessica Sigurdson

The Witness Blanket stands as a national monument to recognize the atrocities of the Indian residential school era, honour the children and symbolize ongoing reconciliation. More than 150,000 Indigenous children were forced into residential schools in Canada between 1870 and 1996.

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights hosted this exhibition between December 2015 and June 2016 in its Level 6 Expressions gallery. 

To explore this powerful installation, you can download an iOS mobile app (free) created by the Witness Blanket team to explain the stories behind the objects you’ll see. 

Pieces of history: Eight objects from The Witness Blanket

The following are examples of the hundreds of items that make up The Witness Blanket – each with their own powerful story.

  1. A cut braid of black hair held with elastics.

    Braids of hair

    Marion and Ellen Newman – sisters of the artist and daughters of residential school survivor Victor Newman – grew their hair for over a year, then cut their braids during an eight‐day traditional ceremony. “It was a way to honour our dad, but a way to honour all the children…because it was just a universal experience,” Ellen told The Globe and Mail. Children had their hair cut or shaved on their first day of school – a traumatic practice for many Indigenous children whose hair was a large part of their cultural identity and cut only in mourning.

  2. A red, striped sash with fringe.

    Métis sash

    The White Buffalo Aboriginal and Métis Health Society from Kamloops, B.C. made this contribution to symbolize a gift of strength, resiliency and endurance. The sash, or ceinture fléchée, is still worn by Métis people today.

  3. Eight fabric dark red and dark green badges placed in two rows. They have embroidered designs on them such as a needle and thread, gardening tools and knitting needles.

    Proficiency badges

    Starting in the 1940s, students in residential schools would receive badges for proficiency in cooking, sewing, weaving, knitting, housekeeping, gardening, leather work, dairying and poultry raising. This system, instituted by the Canadian government, emphasized manual labour over academics. Emma Gladue, a survivor of the Blue Quills Residential School in Alberta, contributed these badges, which she says were earned through abuse and slavery.

  4. An old-fashioned pan balance scale.

    Scale

    Donated by Sharon Edmunds, a residential school survivor from Newfoundland and Labrador, who received it from the principal at Lake Melville School, where scales were stored in the 1950s. Sharon attended Lake Melville High School for four years from 1975 to 1979.

  5. A partially decomposed, leather child’s shoe.

    Shoe

    Harold Gatensby, a survivor of the Carcross Residential School in the Yukon, found this child’s shoe while he was showing Witness Blanket project coordinator Rosy Hartman the site of the original school, which had burned down in the early 1900s. Both Rosy and artist Carey Newman felt a very clear spirit or presence attached to the shoe – which became one of the more powerful pieces that they collected. In the Blanket, the shoe is not only behind plexi‐glass to protect it, it has also been wrapped with a braid of sweetgrass, surrounded by sage (traditional medicines) and bound with red cloth, a symbol of healing and protection.

  6. A white-painted wooden door.

    Door

    This is the door to the infirmary of St. Michaels Residential School in Alert Bay, B.C., collected by Witness Blanket artist Cary Newman in 2014 before the school site was torn down. The image on the back of the door, entitled “The Priest and his Prey,” was created by artist George Littlechild. When Carey chose to transfer George’s artwork onto the door, he did not know that George had felt the urge to create the image after attending the Vancouver gathering of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and hearing the story of abuse suffered at St. Michaels by Edwin Newman, who is Carey’s uncle.

  7. A brass hockey player from the top of a sports trophy.

    Gordon Soldier Lady Hawks 1996 Hockey Trophy

    This trophy was contributed by Ed Bitternose, a survivor of the last residential school to operate in Canada. It illustrates how recently Indigenous children attended residential school.

  8. A grey rock.

    Stone from Inuvik greenhouse

    Contributed by Lucy Kuptana, a survivor from Inuvik, the stone is from the community greenhouse, which was once the site of a hockey rink for the two residential schools in Inuvik. Lucy wanted to contribute something from the greenhouse, which she felt represented the transformation of a site with dark and painful memories into a place of gathering and healing.

Dive Deeper

Canada’s Indian residential schools: Childhood denied

A story about Indian residential schools and their legacy

A group of boys in pyjamas kneel on single beds, heads bowed and hands clasped as if in prayer. A woman stands in the room, her hands clasped in the same way.

The Witness Blanket

This monumental work of art honours Survivors of Canada’s residential schools. A new website lets you learn from their experiences and bear witness to their stories.

A person with curly hair, glasses and wearing a black top examines a large artwork consisting of objects set in cedar frames. The image has been broken into interlocking geometric shapes over a pale brown background with a slight wood grain texture.

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