Painting

Marcus Joe

Whale Through Water 2024
Raven Steals the Sun
MJ 2018
MJ 2018
MJ 2018
Positive Vibrations
MJ 2018
Marcus Joe is a highly skilled self-taught artist/muralist/hip hop artist from the Swinomish Tribe who has painted murals; participated in art exhibitions and performed music live around the Pacific Northwest.

Shana Yellow Calf

We Always Pray
Frybread Trails
Frybread California
Frybread Bus
Buffalo Skull
Raven Dancer
Raven
Plains Dancer
Together at Daybreak Star
at Daybreak Star
Shana Yellow Calf, of 10 Buffalos Art, is an enrolled member of the Northern Arapaho in Wyoming. Shana has been producing captivating art in various mediums since the 1990s, blending her rich plains heritage - Arapaho/Shoshone, her mother's Chippewa/Metis ancestry, and the Pacific Northwest Coastal influence from the Puget Sound area of Washington where she grew up

Jason LaClair

San Juan Island Mural
Vine Deloria Symposium
Nooksack Mural
"Ancestral Connections" Whatcom Museum Mural 2024
Waypoint Park Mural
Ferndale Mural 2022
Native Arts 360 Exhibit 2022
Jason Waypoint Installation
Intergenerational High School Mural
"Salmon Run" Bellingham
Ferndale Mural 2022
Jason with Cagey Pole at Leopold 10.2023
Nooksack Mural
Bellingham Library Mural
2019
San Juan Island
Western Washington University
NA 360 Exhibit 2022
Western Washington University
NA 360 Exhibit 2022
NA 360 Exhibit 2022
NA 360 Exhibit 2022
NA 360 Exhibit 2022
Jason Heart 2021
Logo
Jason with Cagey Pole at Leopold 10.2023
HB
SC
SW
Whorl
Nooksack Mural
Nooksack van
Nooksack Mural
Gift art for RP 2024
Jason LaClair, a lifelong resident of Whatcom County, draws from his Lummi and Nooksack heritage to create art that resonates deeply with Indigenous traditions and modern aesthetics.

Louie Gong

Louie Gong (Nooksack) (M.Ed.) stands as one of the most impactful Coast Salish artists, activists, and social entrepreneurs of our time. His extraordinary ability to unite communities across cultural divides has established him as a transformative force in Indigenous business and art.

Kevin "Wa lee hub" Paul

Kevin Paul website
In the serene landscapes of the Pacific Northwest, where cedar forests meet the shimmering waters of Puget Sound, Kevin "Wa lee hub" Paul stands as a monumental figure in contemporary Coast Salish artistic expression. Born in 1960 and having spent his entire life within the embrace of the Swinomish community, Paul represents the living embodiment of cultural preservation through artistic practice —a journey that began shortly after his graduation from La Conner High School in 1979 and subsequent studies at Skagit Valley College.

Twin Visionaries: The Edwards Sisters Carry Forward Coast Salish Artistic Legacy

In the verdant landscapes of the Pacific Northwest, a profound artistic lineage finds fresh expression through the hands of Nakesha and Nakiya Edwards. The identical twins, members of the Swinomish Tribe, represent an emerging generation in the rich continuum of Coast Salish aesthetic tradition.

Celebrating Native American Heritage Year Round: A November 2023 Review

Native Arts 360's a.i.m. is to promote Indigenous art and culture year round so we collectively expand what it means to celebrate Indigenous peoples contributions beyond the month: acknowledge and appreciate the beauty of the original peoples as they deserve to be. 

Káa Sháyee

Indigeversal Mural- Waypoint Park- 2023
Ferndale Carwash 2023
Ferndale, WA 2023
Káa Sháyee design 2023
Káa Sháyee design 2023
Káa Sháyee design 2023
Káa Sháyee design 2023
Káa Sháyee design 2023
Káa Sháyee design 2023
Originating from Ketchikan, Alaska, ​Káa Sháyee is graphic artist and a member of the Tlingit Tribe. Like many Native Americans, Káa Sháyee’s cultural identity has been heavily disrupted by colonialism. He is dedicated to piecing together his Tlingit identity through art and education.

Native Art Popup at Fringe

Two of Whatcom county's extraordinarily talented artists sold their art for this Labor Day market at Fringe Brewing. On a laid back end of summer warm day Jason LaClair of Lummi and Kaa Shayee, a Tlingit artist local to the area, boldly displayed their phenomenal Coast Salish and line form design through jewelry, prints and stickers. The two artists had recently wrapped up their 160' "Indigiversal" mural at Waypoint Park in Bellingham, WA, positively moving beyond some of the controversy due to how the artists were treated by the Paper Whale organizers of the event.