Piqua,
Ohio
Renata Cauthon is a Cherokee Nation enrolled, IACB-listed, and TERO-certified artist whose work explores the relationships between Indigenous identity, community, healing, and the natural world. Working across watercolor, beadwork, basketry, and textiles, Cauthon creates imagery rooted in quiet strength, ceremony, and the enduring presence of Native peoples, animals, and ancestral knowledge. Through symbolic gatherings, wildlife, and human figures, her work reflects the interconnectedness of land, spirit, and community.
For Cauthon, art has always been a way of processing and communicating with the world around her. As a Cherokee artist, she is naturally drawn to mediums that rely on water or are shaped by it, recognizing water as both a creative force and a source of healing, renewal, and connection. Watercolor remains central to her practice for its fluid, organic qualities, allowing pigment to move in ways that echo the rhythms of water, earth, and breath.
Cauthon views art as a living form of communication — a bridge between artist and viewer that exists beyond words. She believes every person encounters a work of art differently, bringing their own memories, emotions, and experiences into that moment of connection. It is this individualized and deeply human exchange that continues to draw her to creating. Through her work, she seeks to create spaces where stories, identity, emotion, and ancestral knowledge can be felt as much as seen.
Alongside her studio practice, Cauthon teaches cultural and arts workshops at UNESCO-associated heritage sites, universities, and cultural centers, sharing Indigenous perspectives on art, culture, storytelling, and relationships to the natural world. Through both teaching and creative work, she seeks to foster connection, cultural continuity, healing, and reflection.
Medium: Basketry, Beadwork, Painting, Textiles, Turtle Shell Shackles
I work primarily in watercolor, beadwork, basketry, textiles, and traditional cultural arts including turtle shell rattles, often combining Indigenous traditions with contemporary storytelling. I am especially drawn to mediums that involve or depend on water, because water holds deep meaning for me both personally and culturally as a Cherokee artist. Water represents healing, movement, renewal, and connection, and I try to carry those qualities into my work.
Watercolor is central to my practice because of its fluid and organic nature. I allow the movement of pigment and water to guide parts of the creative process, creating pieces that feel alive and layered with emotion. Alongside watercolor, I work in beadwork, basketry, textiles, and turtle shell rattles because I value the relationship between the hand, the material, and the story being carried through the work. Each medium offers a different way to communicate ideas about identity, community, ceremony, nature, and ancestral knowledge.
For me, medium is not just about materials — it is part of the conversation between the artist, the artwork, and the viewer. I choose materials that allow the work to feel grounded, living, and connected to both tradition and personal experience.