Menard worked as an educator at the Flandreau as a young woman. During
World War II, she operated the Rosebud Arts and Crafts Store in South Dakota and the Northern Plains Arts and Crafts Store in
Browning, Montana. In 1941, she was one of four Native American artists invited to participate in an exhibition at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York, where she met First Lady
Eleanor Roosevelt. She worked for the
Bureau of Indian Affairs in
Rapid City for 30 years, assisting Dorothy Field as director of the
Rapid City Museum, among other responsibilities. Menard became known as a community quiltmaker in the Northern Plains style, which involves one large colorful star made of diamond-shaped fabric pieces. She worked with the Michigan Traditional Arts Program at
Michigan State University. In 1995, she received a National Heritage Fellowship from the
National Endowment for the Arts, and the South Dakota Living Indian Treasure Award. == Personal life and legacy ==