
A new show at the Kelowna Art Gallery and Okanagan Heritage Museum showcases art by children who attended the Inkameep Day School, including this piece “Three Horses” by Jane Stelkia. The exhibition is open from Jan. 19 to April 14. (Contributed photo)
A collaboration between the Kelowna Museums Society and the Kelowna Art Gallery is bringing an important local story from the Osoyoos Indian Band to life.
The joint exhibition, entitled Our Lives Through Our Eyes: Nk’Mip Children’s Art, presents over 75 works of art created by children and youth who attended the Inkameep Day School during the era of World War II.
Under the tutelage of Mr. Anthony Walsh, the school, which was located on the Osoyoos Indian Band reserve, became nationally and internationally renowned for its students’ production of art and drama based on their Okanagan identity and history.
The exhibition, which is divided between the Okanagan Heritage Museum and the Kelowna Art Gallery, features graphite drawings as well as paintings on paper and hide created by the students.
Archival photographs and interpretive panels will further help visitors to glimpse through the Nk’Mip children’s eyes, the complex layers of traditions and histories meeting with new ways of life and the social and political changes of the time.
Today the Inkameep Day School artworks are valued points of departure for contemporary Nk’Mip arts, culture and education.
• Read more: Image And Text Exhibit Gives Glimpse Into Artistic Process
Our Lives Through Our Eyes: Nk’Mip Children’s Art is on view from January 19 to April 14.
The exhibition is organized collaboratively by the Kelowna Art Gallery and the Kelowna Museums Society, with assistance from the Osoyoos Museum Society and the Osoyoos Indian Band. It is guest curated by Dr. Andrea Walsh, Professor of Anthropology, at the University of Victoria.
A number of public events and workshops have been planned in conjunction with this exhibition.
An opening reception will be held on Saturday, January 19, from 1 to 3 p.m. The reception begins at the Kelowna Art Gallery before moving to the Okanagan Heritage Museum at 2 p.m.
Our Lives Through Our Eyes: Nk’Mip Children’s Art is supported by Fortis BC, Central Okanagan Public Schools, and the Province of British Columbia. Works on loan are from the Osoyoos Museum Society, Royal British Columbia Museum, artist Taylor Baptiste, and Colleen and Richard Baptiste.
The Kelowna Art Gallery is located at 1315 Water Street, and the Okanagan Heritage Museum is located at 470 Queensway Avenue in Kelowna. For more information, visit them online at www.kelownaartgallery.com or www.kelownamuseums.ca respectively.

