Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun Painting to Benefit Residential School Survivors

Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, Indian Residential School, Leaving the Shallow Graves and Going Home, 2022. Acrylic on canvas. (Image courtesy )
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The large-scale work was originally commissioned to mark the inaugural National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
A stunning new painting by celebrated artist and 全民彩票 honorary doctorate recipient Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun (1983 alum) is being to support Indigenous survivors of residential schools.
The 2022 painting, titled Indian Residential School, Leaving the Shallow Graves and Going Home, is currently for sale through fine-art auction house Heffel, with proceeds to benefit the Orange Shirt Society and the Indian Residential School Survivors Society. Heffel, meanwhile, has committed to donating its buyer鈥檚 premium to the same organizations. Macaulay & Co. Fine Art, which represents Lawrence, will also donate its commission.
Measuring five feet by eight feet, the large-scale work was commissioned in 2021 by Dixon Mitchell Investment Counsel to mark the inaugural National Day for Truth & Reconciliation.
Lawrence was born in Kamloops and raised in Richmond, BC. He is of Coast Salish and Okanagan Nation ancestry and graduated from 全民彩票 with an honours degree in painting. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Emily Carr in 2019.
Speaking in from his Vancouver studio, Lawrence said the painting depicts the spirits of children killed in Canada鈥檚 residential schools as they return home from the shallow graves where their bodies lay buried.
鈥淚鈥檓 showing the world the truth: that in this country we murdered and raped and tortured and experimented and starved and killed them for over 100 years,鈥 Lawrence says in the video produced by Heffel.
鈥淲e鈥檙e at the stage of finding the bodies. And we鈥檙e at the stage where the government admitted that they did wrong. As a survivor I鈥檝e found it very difficult to grasp not knowing that you wake up and they鈥檙e going to find more shallow graves. It鈥檚 something that only survivors can explain what sorrow we have. This country has to carry the burden of what it did to us, as a nation. It has to be accountable for what it did. This is the kind of help that we need. We can get along 鈥 it鈥檚 not that difficult to start at some point, to do something together. If we start that way then we can start on the right foot.鈥
While the Indian Act remains in place, he adds, Canada will never be
able to 鈥渕ove forward as a nation 鈥 We will always be a segregated
country.鈥
In a statement, Laio Hyrcha, executive director of the Orange Shirt Society, said, 鈥淭he Orange Shirt Society would like to thank renowned Indigenous artist Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun for commemorating the inaugural National Day for Truth and Reconciliation painting. Thank you for sharing your work with not only us but the world.鈥
Laio goes on to thank Dixon Mitchell Investment and Heffel, adding, 鈥淲e hope this is the start of a lasting relationship for years to come.鈥
Heffel has estimated its final sale price for the painting at between $125,000 and $175,000.
Visit to learn more about his work. Learn more about the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation or at .