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Art honours slain women – Metro US

Art honours slain women

Mona Wilson’s face can be seen in the Downtown Eastside again for the first time since she went missing in 2001.

A giant painting of the woman — who was murdered by Robert Pickton — was unveiled in Gastown yesterday by Vancouver artist Pamela Masik.

Mona is the first of 69 massive paintings of missing inner city women to be unveiled by the local artist, who called the project “overwhelming.”

“Some of the things I did early in the work were to re-enact the death of some of the women who were linked to the Pickton case,” Masik said, explaining that in some cases she slashed the canvas. “It was almost as if I was birthing them and then recreating their death and then healing them, stitching them up.”

Bruce Curtiss, manager of Vancouver ministries for Union Gospel Mission, said the project will have a “profound, immediate and life-long effect on” women in the community. “As these paintings are revealed it’s saying (we’re) allowed to remember. We’re allowed to feel and shed tears.”

Masik has launched a program called The Creative Journey, which will be run out of the Union Gospel Mission, to allow women to express themselves through art.

Linda Westley, who has been a patron and volunteer at the Mission since 2003, said that by breathing life back into the 69 missing women, Masik has reaffirmed that they were important, and that they lived.