Rebecca Lee Kunz is an artist, illustrator, and the owner of Tree of Life Studio. She was awarded the 2025 Randolph Caldecott Award for her illustrations in the picture book Chooch Helped. A citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, Rebecca’s work draws upon tribal iconography, archetypal symbolism, and mythology. A visual storyteller and folklorist, she hopes to illuminate awareness about our shifting climate and to inspire solutions to the issues of today. Her work can be found in museum shops, galleries, online, in picture books, and in editorial illustrations.
Rebecca speaks about illustrating children’s books, being the artist and owner of a woman-owned business, how to make a living as an artist, working with publishing companies, how to find your voice as an artist, how to sell your artwork, iconography and symbolism in illustration, environmental justice in art, endangered species in art, and how to use your platform to bring about change.
Rebecca sells her work at the Museum of Contemporary Native Art, Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Museum of International Folk Art, New Mexico History Museum, Gilcrease Museum, Santa Ynez Chumash Museum and Cultural Center, Denver Botanical Gardens and the Cherokee Nation Gift shop, among others.
She is finishing her second book Ruth Muskrat and the Indian Problem with her sister, Jen Loren (Senior Director Cherokee Film). Her publisher is Levine Querido.
