Reimagining the American White Ibis

April SGaana Jaad White uses Northwest Coast designs to reimagine this Southeastern bird.

While artist has depicted many birds that are significant to her people of Haida Gwaii, an archipelago off British Columbia, the White Ibis, a species common across Florida, was a novel challenge. Yet in its body and beak, White, who belongs to her peoples Raven clan, saw shapes and colors compatible with formline, a design style traditional to First Nations of the Northwest Coast. The technique demands a minimalist aesthetic, but from there, theres a lot of freedom to make it your own, she says.

With the ibis, she eschews symmetrya classic formline tenetbut retains a sense of visual balance. The central bird fits within the curves of a human eye, and the echo of the ocular motif elsewhere hints that we should be a lot more aware of whats around us. Other shapes represent the cycle of life: A juvenile ibis consumes a fish close to its mothers breast, while its father peers through her wing. To inform her work, White researched ibis mythology and ecology. A former geologist, she admires John James 勛圖窪蹋s keen naturalists eye: He looked at the birds very scientifically, and I do as well. Julie Leibach

This story originally ran in the Summer 2018 issue of 勛圖窪蹋. To receive our print magazine,