Gauntlet (Skin Side) Haley BassettGroundbirch, British Columbia Vote Vote for Gauntlet (Skin Side)Haley Bassett You can change your vote at any time before 5pm PST on October 17, 2025 Enter a valid email address to confirm your vote Email address Confirm vote Size 21" x 27" Medium Inkjet print This piece explores the complexities of being a Métis woman living in northeast BC, where the oil and gas industry heavily impacts my community. Referencing traditional gauntlets, the welding glove represents my time working in the industry and is a contemporary gauntlet. It acknowledges the inherent tensions about working in the industry while recognizing the socioeconomic reality we inherit or the “gauntlet” we must navigate – as many Indigenous people often have no choice but to work in resource extraction. In other words, I worked in oil and gas despite my Métis values and because I am Métis. Buy artwork Gauntlet (Skin Side) Haley BassettGroundbirch, British Columbia Vote Vote for Gauntlet (Skin Side)Haley Bassett Enter a valid email address to confirm your vote Email address Confirm vote Buy artwork About the artist About the artist Haley BassettGroundbirch, British Columbia Haley Basset is an artist of Métis and settler descent from Treaty 8. She is a registered citizen of Métis Nation BC. Her visual practice incorporates locally harvested natural materials and found objects and spans various mediums, including painting, sculpture, installation, beadwork, and textile arts. Born and raised in a remote area of northeast BC, her artistic approach is rooted in a sense of place and identity. As the daughter of settler farmers, Indigenous hunters, and horsemen, the artist grapples with conflicting inherited relationships with the land and a contemporary Métis experience. Follow on social