Portraits of MMIW part of street art project in Regina, Toronto - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Portraits of MMIW part of street art project in Regina, Toronto

Faces of missing and murdered indigenous women are popping up on vacant buildings in Regina and Toronto.

Ron Wild started his Missing and Murdered street art project last spring

Ron Wild placed this portrait on an abandoned building on Broad Street in Regina. (Eman Bare/CBC)

Faces of missing and murdered indigenous women are popping up on vacant buildings in Regina and Toronto.

The portraits are part of a global art project called Inside Outstarted by French street artist JR.

People from all over the world send JRportraits that he prints into pasteable posters to be publicly displayed. The idea is to turn personal identity into art toconvey a message or make a statement.

Ron Wild, an artist originally from Regina now workingand livingin Toronto, wanted to bring attention to aCanada-wide issue missing and murdered indigenous women.

Shelley Anderson, 51, was last seen in the summer of 2009 in Haileybury and Cobalt, both towns in Ontario. (Ron Wild/Missing & Murdered)

"It was just something that has always bothered me. There are hundreds, 1,200 or more, I'm sure there are way more, that have gone missing," Wild said.

He registered his project, Missing & Murdered, with Inside Out and plastered his first poster last spring. He saidthe federal election campaigninspired him to add more.

19-year-old Lana Derrick went missing in the early hours of Oct. 6, 1995. RCMP say she was last seen at a gas station on Highway 16 just outside Terrace, B.C. early that morning. (Ron Wild/Missing & Murdered)

"People were trying to make this a non-issue and that started to really bother me and I knew of JR's initiative, where he was doing these portrait posters all over the world for different causes, and it just seemed like a good match of a real need we have in Canada," said Wild.

Wild saidhis biggest challenge is finding the right location forthe posters. The portraits often get covered up by other street art or removed from the buildingsbut Wild saidit doesn't discourage him from adding more.

Angela Poorman was a 29-year-old mother of three when she was found stabbed to death in Winnipegs North End on Dec. 14, 2014. The homicide case remains open. (Ron Wild/Missing & Murdered)

"It's very rewarding for me to put the brush in the glue and to start putting it up, knowing that this possibly could lead to some good," Wild said.

He addedhe hopes other people or artists across the country will join him in bringing awareness to missing and murdered indigenous women by installing portraits in their home towns.

"This is a person. A real person and she is somewhere or somebody knows what has happened to her," Wild said.

"By putting it out on the street, where she's gone missing, or where people are, who might know what has happened to her,it just seems like a natural thing to do."

Ron Wild posted a portrait of Shelley Anderson in both Regina and Toronto. (Eman Bare/CBC)

With files from CBC's The Afternoon Edition and Eman Bare