Models

Rising Model Quannah Chasinghorse’s First Met Gala Was Filled With Meaning

Rising Model Quannah Chasinghorses First Met Gala Was Filled With Meaning
Photo: Patrick Phillips / Courtesy of IMG Models
Quannah Chasinghorse with her grandmother and mother.

Quannah Chasinghorse with her grandmother and mother.

Photo: Patrick Phillips / Courtesy of IMG Models

“Quannah is from the Hän Gwich’in and Lakota tribes; however, she was born and partially raised on the Navajo Nation in Arizona,” says Simmons. “I wanted to complement the dress with Navajo jewelry.” To do so, Chasinghorse reached out to her aunt, Jocelyn Billy-Upshaw—a former Miss Navajo Nation—who loaned her some pieces from her personal jewelry collection, featuring Navajo artists from across the Southwest. (Billy-Upshaw flew out from Phoenix with the pieces.) “The turquoise jewelry represents protection, guidance, and love in Navajo culture,” says Chasinghorse. “I grew up close to Navajo people and culture.”

Overall, the most important part of the night for Chasinghorse was not delivering this stellar fashion moment—though she did, indeed, do that—rather it was having a seat at the table. “I’m constantly breaking those barriers and stereotypes that are meant to harm my people and make us feel less than human. It was refreshing to feel empowered in a space where I wouldn’t have been welcomed if it was a decade ago,” says Chasinghorse. “I really wanted to be able to get some visibility and show the world that we are still here.”

Below, a closer look at Chasinghorse’s first Met gala.