Gwen Monnet | Stolen Sisters
to
Comox Valley Art Gallery 580 Duncan Ave, Courtenay, British Columbia V9N 2M7

Gwen Monnet, “Stolen Sisters,” 2024
video and installation (courtesy of the Gallery)
Ongoing Project + Installation — CVAG Hub
This project initiated by artist Gwen Monnet will continue to expand as she collaborates with others.
The earlier presentation of this project and it’s presentation during the convergent program Upholding One Another can be read about at these links:
Installation Components:
Stolen Sister | The Métis — Gwen Monnet
Stolen Sister | The Kwakwaka’wakw — Elder, Dr. Evelyn Voyageur + Gwen Monnet
Stolen Sisters — cedar house panels | gifted to the Comox Valley Art Gallery by SD 71 Indigenous Education
Stolen Sisters — single channel video | 6:20 min. | singers: Latisha Wadhams Pelkey, Isaiah Wadhams, Tommy Brown + Shawn Decaire | audio recording: Zac Whyte concept + editing: Carla Voyageur | with gratitude to Lil’ Red Dress Project: Carla Voyageur + Jeannine Lindsay
Cultural Cedar Teaching with Elder, Dr. Evelyn Voyageur — single channel video | 21:15 min. | documentation + editing: Zac Whyte
STOLEN SISTER | THE MÉTIS — Gwen Monnet
My interest in the Red Dresses came about with the visit of Walking with Our Sisters in our community in 2015. It was an extremely powerful exhibit featuring 1,810 moccasin vamps made by 1,400 people honoring the Missing and Murdered Indigenous women and Girls across Canada. Ramona Johnson and the Everson family were among those who volunteered countless hours to bring this event to the K’ómoks First Nation.
A button blanket was created as the Comox Valleys’ contribution to the travelling exhibit and the public was invited to visit the IHOS and sew a button around the perimeter of the blanket. Families of victims were invited to place a button in the interior of the blanket. It was here that I placed my sister’s unfinished beadwork that had sat in her kit for over 30 years; she was killed at the age of 16.
It was very meaningful to me that Karen had found a place among her stolen sisters and was, in a way, part of the world again.
The following year, a call to action was made by the Red Dress Project and as a response I fabricated nine red dresses for the high schools in our district. These dresses were adorned with sashes to represent the Métis, abalone for the First Nations and a seal ‘fur’ belt for the Inuit women and girls.
My wish was to take that idea a step further and create three-dimensional hollow sculptures to illustrate the invisibility of our missing sisters. The dresses are to be of various styles and sizes for impact and personalized to represent different age groups and Indigenous nations. They are to be a part of an ongoing project to create awareness for our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls+.
As I am Métis, the child’s dress is adorned with a sash and floral pattern to honour the women and girls of my culture. This mixed-media sculpture was originally created for Indigenous Education SD 71.
STOLEN SISTER | THE KWAKWAKA’WAKW — Gwen Monnet + Elder, Dr. Evelyn Voyageur
I was very honoured when Dr. Evelyn Voyageur agreed to work with me on the woman’s dress. Cedar weaving is a long-standing tradition in her family and the healing element of this sacred medicine is a gift for the families of the stolen women of the Kwakwaka’wakw nation.
My intention for this sculpture was to bring more attention to the ongoing issue of our Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls+. I felt that the public recognized the symbolism of the red dress but perhaps it needed to be more personal. Our missing sisters needed to be called by name.
It should not be so easy to disappear; in a society where these girls were/are made to feel invisible, I wanted them to be seen.
Evelyns’ grand-daughter, Carla Voyageur, is co-founder (with Jeannine Walker) of the Lil’ Red Dress Project. Their important work has enabled the funding for billboards for local missing Indigenous women and girls. It was through them that families of victims were approached, and names were added to the interior of the dress. I hope that it brings comfort to these families to know that their loved ones are not alone.
It is important to note that the individuals pictured [in the dress on the screen] are a small representation of the thousands of Indigenous Women and Girls+ whose families are still searching, hoping, praying, and grieving.
Julia Bruce
Annie Cedar
Marion Dawson
Joanne Green
Janet Henry
Lavina Henry
Ainjil Hunt
Emma Isaac
Morenda Isaac
Lorraine Jacobson
Irene James
Elizabeth Lagis
Kayla Lalonde
Angeline Pete
Caroline Rufus
Cindy Scow
Carsyn Seaweed
Michelle Shaw
Therena Silva
Linda Speck
Adriane Wadhams
Patricia Wadhams
Rosalind Wadhams
Selena Wallace
Kristina Ward
Angie Williams