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Steph Littlebird

Native American artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Steph Littlebird is a Native American multimedia artist, illustrator, and exhibit curator who is a member of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde.[1][2][3] She is known for her curation of the exhibit, "This is Kalapuyan Land".[4]

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Early life and education

Littlebird was born in 1984 or 1985[5] and grew up in Banks, Oregon.[4] She is an enrolled member of the Confederated Tribes of Grande Ronde.[6]

She graduated from Pacific Northwest College of Art in 2015 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting and Printmaking.[7]

Graphic design and illustration

Littlebird re-designed the Yahoo logo for 2022 Native American Heritage Month using Native American-inspired patterns.[8][9] The final "O" was used as Yahoo's avatar on its social media platforms for the month of November.[9]

My Powerful Hair was published in March 2023 through Abrams Books for Young Readers.[2] The children's book was written by Carole Lindstrom and illustrated by Littlebird.[10]

Littlebird created a portrait of Shimkhin displayed as part of the exhibit My Father's Father's Sister: Our Ancestor Shimkhin, which opened at Chachalu Tribal Museum and Cultural Center in 2023.[6]

Littlebird has artwork displayed in the exterior window niches of the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art as well as other locations around the University of Oregon.[11]

Fierce Aunties, a children's book written by Laurel Goodluck and illustrated by Littlebird, was published in April 2025.[12] The Summer of the Bones Horses was also published April 2025, through Abrams Books for Young Readers. It is a chapter book written by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve and illustrated by Littlebird.[13]

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Curatorial career

Littlebird first curated This Is Kalapuyan Land at the Five Oaks Museum (formerly Washington County Museum) in 2019. The exhibit incorporated materials from a 2008 Five Oaks Museum exhibit titled This Kalapuya Land, which were then visibly annotated and edited by LIttlebird with help from Grand Ronde historian David G. Lewis.[14][15] These panels were displayed alongside works by contemporary Indigenous artists.[16] A modified version of the exhibit opened at the Pittock Mansion in 2023.[15]

Littlebird curated the exhibition Ancestors, hosted by the Portland Parks & Recreation at the Multnomah Arts Center in 2024.[17]

Littlebird curated the Salem Art Association Exhibition Indigenous Northwest, on view at the Bush Barn Art Center from September 6 to October 27, 2024.[1]

Awards and fellowships

References

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