A Native American photographer took powerful portraits of members of every tribe across the US
- Matika Wilbur photographed members of every federally recognized Native American tribe.
- She named the series Project 562 for the number of recognized tribes at the time.
- She published a book of her photos titled "Project 562: Changing the Way We See Native America."
Photographer Matika Wilbur was on assignment in South America when her grandmother appeared to her in a dream and told her to go capture her own people.
Wilbur, who is Native American, listened.
She embarked on a yearslong project photographing members of every federally recognized Native tribe in North America. In 2023, she published her collection of photos in a book titled "Project 562: Changing the Way We See Native America."
Wilbur spoke with Business Insider about her project, her photos, and the importance of agency in Native American representation.
Take a look at Wilbur's powerful portraits.
Wilbur herself is Swinomish and Tulalip.
When Wilbur began her project in 2012, there were 562 federally recognized Native American tribes. Now, there are 574.ย
"We're always redrafting the language to describe this project," Wilbur told Business Insider.
The Zone System creates more dynamic range in the images.
"I figured that that was sort of irresponsible when I started this project, to travel all over the country and not show the landscape," Wilbur said.
"Sometimes I'll be in the Grand Canyon and I'd rather take somebody's picture at Havasupai Falls because it's magnificent and there's this incredible blue-green water coming out of the ground ... and they want to be photographed on their front porch because they love where they live," she said. "I'll do what they want to do because people should be represented in a way that is important to them, especially in Indian Country."
In the above portrait, Wilbur photographed three members of the Tulalip tribe: Darkfeather, Bibiana, and Eckos Ancheta.
Dine' (Navajo Nation) member Jaclyn Roessel posed for one of Wilbur's portraits.
Their conversations touched on family, love, heartbreak, moments that shaped them, and their hopes for the future.
"I find that people have really interesting things to say when you ask them what it means to be whatever their tribe is, and then when you ask them what it means to be an 'Indian,'" she said. "I'm fascinated by that."
Ailee Fregoso of the Cheyenne River Sioux tribe showed off her colorful fringed shawl.
The book, published in 2023, became a New York Times bestseller.
Wilbur also cohosts the podcast All My Relations, in which she and Adrienne Keene โ a professor who is also Native American โ discuss their relationships to land, ancestors, and other Native peoples.
"I didn't know that strangers can become family relatively quickly," she said. "It's such a whirlwind of a journey."
Editor's note: This story was originally published in 2016. It was updated in 2022 and 2024.