Delina White is a contemporary Native American artist specializing in indigenous, gender-fluid clothing for the LGBT and Two-spirit Native communities. She is also an activist for issues such as environmental crisis, violence against women, and sex trafficking.
White is a member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe.
White attended Bemidji State University, where she earned a Bachelors of Science in Business Administration with an emphasis in Management, and a minor in Management Information Systems. It took White twenty years to complete the degree and she was the first of her family to attend college.
She has two daughters, Lavender Hunt and Sage Davis, who help run her company and her granddaughter Nookwakwii or Snowy White.
She produced her first fashion show at the Great Lakes Woodland Skirts Fashion Show in 2015. For the show White used her clothing and image projections along with her own narration to give insight about the history of traditional Native women's ribbon skirts. She elaborated that ribbon skirts can be worn anytime and that wearing it makes it a symbol of cultural celebration of the legacy of Native peoples. The mediums used by White to create her work were fabric, thread, beading, and other materials.
White has won numerous awards and grants for her work, which has been exhibited in locations such as the Art Institute of Minneapolis. She typically works with modern/contemporary fabrics from around the world materials such as hand-tanned leather, bones, and shells, which she uses to create and design traditional Native works.
In 2021, White had her first show at FWMN in September 2021 called Native Visions.
In 2023, Northern Lights Anishinaabe Fashion Show was back in Minnesota.
She showcased her collection at the Walker Art Center on June 13, 2019, and chose to use people who identified as two-spirit and queer as her models. The collection is made of fifteen contemporary Great Lakes woodland-style skirts, along with items such as pipe bags, handbags, and moccasins. The collection also features a piece created by White's daughter Lavender, a skirt that features an Ojibwe floral design and a high slit intended to allow the individual wearing it to show their leg if they so wish. Of the collection as a whole, White has stated that the clothing is "meant to make the individual wearing them, happy, to feel good, to feel good about who they are, be confident and take pride in being a Two-Spirit."
Art career
I Am Anishinaabe
Awards and honors
Exhibitions and shows
External links
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