Through Her Eyes

    Opening July 10 at the Red Earth Art Center

    We’re proud to present Through Her Eyes, a powerful new exhibition featuring Indigenous women artists whose work celebrates identity, tradition, and creative resilience. From painting and beadwork to photography and textiles, these extraordinary works offer a glimpse into the world through each artist’s unique perspective.

    Join us in honoring their stories this summer—on view July 11 through September 26, 2025, at the Red Earth Art Center in downtown Oklahoma City.

    • Katherine Ashby

      Choctaw

      Katherine Ashby is a Choctaw artist from rural southeast Oklahoma. With the support of her family, she has developed her skills independently and continues to grow as an artist. Her work reflects pride in her heritage and deep connection to place.

    • Mack Brim

      Choctaw

      Mack Brim is a figurative oil painter whose work explores modern womanhood, identity, and authenticity. Her portraits and still lifes draw inspiration from the women around her, creating space for connection and self-expression.

    • Donna Courtney

      Chickasaw

      Donna “Dancing Star” Courtney is a Chickasaw storyteller and award-winning artist who works across drawing, digital art, photography, and gourd design. She moved to Oklahoma to connect more deeply with her culture and incorporates Southeastern motifs throughout her work.

    • Erica Eppler

      Mississippi Choctaw / Shoshone-Bannock

      Erica Eppler is a Mississippi Choctaw and Shoshone-Bannock artist whose work reflects layered heritage and cultural pride. Her practice spans traditional and contemporary influences, sharing visual stories grounded in Indigenous experience.

    • Sherry Goshon

      Choctaw

      Sherry Goshon is an internationally known artist with works featured in museums, magazines, and coffee table books. Her career spans exclusive shows—including for Disney—and she represented Iowa on President Bush’s White House Christmas tree.

    • Destiny Green

      Chickasaw

      Destiny Green is a multidisciplinary artist working in photography, sculpture, video, and printmaking. A proud Chickasaw mother and graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, her work explores themes of memory, transformation, and surreal states of being.

    • Lauren Kelly

      Citizen Potawatomi

      Lauren Kelly is an Oklahoma-based painter known for her asymmetrical designs and dreamlike figures. Her work reinterprets Potawatomi and Woodland styles to explore themes of autonomy, ancestral memory, and feminine identity.

    • Steph Littlebird

      Grand Ronde Confederated Tribes of Oregon

      Steph Littlebird is a visual artist, curator, and author whose work combines traditional Indigenous motifs with bold, contemporary graphics. Her art centers Native identity, land stewardship, and cultural resilience. She has been recognized nationally and collaborated with brands like Lucasfilm and Yahoo.

    • Sheridan MacKnight

      White Earth Chippewa / Hunkpapa Lakota

      Sheridan MacKnight creates emotionally driven imagery that honors her Lakota and Chippewa roots. Her work reflects deep spiritual devotion and tells stories through a contemporary lens while staying grounded in cultural tradition.

    • Cynthia Masterson

      Comanche

      Cynthia Masterson is a Comanche bead artist and founder of Blue Dot Beadwork. Based in Seattle, she teaches beadwork at events and schools while creating assemblages that combine traditional beading with found materials. She also launched the Little Bead Library to promote community creativity.

    • Joyce Nevaquaya Harris

      Comanche

      (with Crow and Chickasaw heritage)

      Joyce Nevaquaya Harris is a painter carrying forward the legacy of her father, Doc Tate Nevaquaya. Her work captures the essence of Native life and tradition, often inspired by dancers and community figures. She honors her heritage through color, story, and heartfelt portraiture.

    • Selena Palmer

      Caddo and Cheyenne

      Selena Palmer is a Caddo and Cheyenne artist and poet whose work is rooted in cultural storytelling. She expresses her experiences and heritage through both visual art and poetry, describing creativity as her love language.

    • D. Jill Parker Fields

      Comanche Nation of Oklahoma, Wichita & Affiliated Tribes, Kiowa

      D. Jill Parker-Fields is a visual artist and performing arts enthusiast inspired by her children, both artists themselves. With a background in Native American Studies, she began painting to connect with her daughters and now creates works rooted in cultural pride and family tradition.

    • Kira Poole (Hayen)

      Caddo Nation of Oklahoma

      Kira Hayen is a Caddo painter and writer whose work explores personal identity and cultural intersections. With an MFA in Creative Writing from IAIA, she uses both paint and prose to challenge stereotypes and uplift Native voices.

    • Ashlee Ray

      Chickasaw / Adai Caddo Descendant

      Ashlee Ray is a multidisciplinary artist whose work merges digital illustration with Southeastern Native iconography. Raised disconnected from her culture, she uses art to reconnect with her identity. Her recent work includes ledger art and multi-media storytelling.

    • Lauren J. Reed

      Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma / Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma

      Lauren J. Reed is a full-time visual artist known for her vivid paintings, drawings, and custom fashion work. A proud Choctaw and Cherokee artist, her work has been featured across the U.S., including collaborations with Urban Decay, Ozzy Osbourne, and Can-Am Ryker.

    • Nancy Rhoades

      Mississippi Choctaw

      Nancy Rhoades is a Mississippi Choctaw artist from Jimtown, Oklahoma, whose journey in art began later in life and flourished through community encouragement. Her work honors her family’s deep heritage and connection to the land, drawing inspiration from her upbringing and faith.

    • Polly Sharp

      Cherokee

      Polly Sharp is a plein air oil painter from Oklahoma whose work captures the natural beauty of the prairie. She paints on location to honor the land and its stories, drawing from her Cherokee and Irish-American heritage.

    • Candace Shanholtzer

      Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma

      Candace Shanholtzer is a Choctaw artist who works in oil, acrylic, gouache, and graphite. Her award-winning art is featured in galleries across Oklahoma and Texas and in collections throughout the U.S. She creates full time from her home studio in southern Oklahoma.

    • Leilani Shaw

      Mohawks of Akwesasne

      Leilani Shaw is a Kanien'kehá:ka (Mohawk) and Northern Paiute multidisciplinary artist specializing in digital art, murals, and projection. Her work explores Indigenous womanhood, cultural identity, and storytelling through surreal, contemporary visuals.

    • Amanda Sterba

      Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma

      Amanda Sterba is a Choctaw beadwork artist and painter based in Oklahoma City. She combines Austrian crystal, buckskin, and glass beads with oil painting and mixed media, drawing inspiration from the Oklahoma landscape and her cultural identity.

    • Minnie TallBear

      Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma

      Minnie TallBear is a multimedia artist whose work reflects pride in her Cheyenne heritage and the resilience of her family. She creates conceptual pieces in printmaking, painting, sculpture, and performance that explore Native identity, historical trauma, and cultural beauty.

    • Savannah Tallbear

      Kaw Nation of Oklahoma

      Savannah Tallbear is a Kaw and Oglala Lakota artist based in Oklahoma City. Her vibrant body of work—spanning beadwork, murals, and painting—blends Indigenous tradition with contemporary expression and explores storytelling, identity, and cultural futurism.

    • Holli Taylor

      Choctaw

      Holli Taylor is a queer multidisciplinary artist from the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. They explore dance, film, and visual arts while also studying languages and caring for their Choctaw grandmother, weaving personal and cultural connection into their work.

    • Whitney Virden

      Comanche, Kiowa, Cherokee

      Whitney Virden is a floral artist and entrepreneur blending Native culture with contemporary floral design. As one of the few Native American florists in the industry, her award-winning work honors Indigenous identity and storytelling through botanical art.

    • Deana Ward

      Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma

      Deana Ward is a Choctaw artist from Durant, Oklahoma, with a doctorate in Psychology. Her beadwork integrates Southeastern traditions and explores cultural identity and evolution. A lifelong learner and mother of five, Deana now works primarily with children.

    • Juliette Williams

      Oklahoma Choctaw

      Juliette Williams is a disabled Choctaw artist and community advocate working in painting and sculpture. Her art reflects personal resilience, ancestral stories, and her passion for uplifting Indigenous women through visual narratives.