Gitxsan artist demands apology for use of her design on lacrosse league shirt
A Gitxsan artist has accused a U.S.-based men's professional indoor lacrosse league and two Canadian lacrosse teams of stealing her T-shirt design that honours survivors of the Indian residential school system.
Michelle Stoney of Hazelton in northwestern B.C. says the U.S.-based National Lacrosse League and its two Canadian members — Halifax Thunderbirds and Vancouver Warriors — are selling orange T-shirts with a similar hand logo for fundraising purposes.
She says she first saw a Warriors' Facebook post last week which featured a photo of a player wearing the shirt, with the design credited to another person.
"I can't really explain the feeling, but it was … it was horrible," she told host Carolina de Ryk on CBC's Daybreak North.
In Stoney's original design created for Orange Shirt Day on Sept. 30, 2020, mountains and trees represent the Gitxsan Nation, the flowers represent children, and the feathers represent children who were lost in residential schools. Sept. 30 is now a national holiday and is officially called National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
Stoney is one of the many Indigenous artists across Canada whose works have been used by online vendors and companies alike without permission.
Stoney says it looks like the Thunderbirds designer "flipped" her work by tracing the hand and adding the words Every Child Matters to replace the mountain, tree and flowers on the palm of her piece.
A Google search shows many shirts bearing logos similar to Stoney's are being sold on various e-commerce platforms.
Stoney says she is fine with lending her creative works, such as the Indigenous feather colouring pages, for other people to use, as long as they ask for her consent to collaborate.
Stoney says she contacted the