Wakeah Jhane My Sisters Comfort (2026)
Wakeah Jhane My Sisters Comfort (2026)
Wakeah Jhane My Sisters Comfort (2026)
Wakeah Jhane My Sisters Comfort (2026)

Wakeah Jhane My Sisters Comfort (2026)

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My Sisters Comfort

14"x11" painting, 26"x22" framed. 

Authentic antique ledger paper 1800-1900s. Watercolor, gouache, india ink, gold pigment, papel amate mat.

This piece depicts the quiet intimacy of care, rest and belonging. Honouring the spoken and unspoken tenderness found in sisterhood. Speaking to the ways comfort can live in simple presence. In being near one another, being seen and held quietly without words, omitting understanding. This piece is shaped by the bond, connection, trust and love that only a sibling or a chosen sibling could understand. 

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About the artist

Wakeah Jhane

Wakeah Jhane is an Indigenous ledger artist and mother of two daughters whose work honors the enduring strength, love, memory, and beauty of Indigenous life. She descends from the Penatuka and Yaparuka bands of the Numunuu (Comanche), as well as the Gáuigú (Kiowa), GWY (Cherokee) and Amskapi Piikani (Blackfeet).

Her practice continues the historic Plains ledger art tradition and is deeply connected to her own lineage. Today, Wakeah works on authentic antique ledger paper from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, transforming these historical documents into contemporary expressions of Indigenous presence and cultural continuity.

About Wanuskewin collective

Our shops are a not-for-profit organization that have been apart of the Wanuskewin Heritage Park for over 30 years now. With our earnings going back into the park and other organizations such as ones involved in survivors of Residential schools as well as families of Missing Murdered Indigenous Women; we are fortunate and proud to be apart of Treaty 6 Territory.

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