Baskets Goshorn wove more than 200 baskets from 2009 to 2018. The
Museum of the Cherokee Indian identified her as the 14th living Eastern Band Cherokee to master the difficult double-weave technique. Goshorn also modeled some of her baskets after those that would have had specific uses in the tribal community. She told the
American Indian Magazine, that it could take six months to weave a basket. Before her focus on baskets, Goshorn's work consisted largely of drawings, paintings, photography and hand-tinted photography. With her work, Goshorn presented historical and current issues with the portrayal of Native American people. Goshorn's work is in the collection of the
National Museum of the American Indian, the
Denver Art Museum, the
Museum of Contemporary Native Arts in Santa Fe, N.M., the Museum of the Cherokee Indian in Cherokee, N.C., and the
North American Native Museum in Zurich. Her work is also in the collection of the
Renwick Gallery and was included in their 50th Anniversary show
This Present Moment: Crafting a Better World. Molly McGlennen writes of Goshorn's baskets that they "reveal Indigenous versions of history, which necessarily uncover – rather than enshroud -- the chasms of division between Native and non-Native peoples."
Honest Injun Honest Injun is one of Goshorn's series that addresses human rights issues specific to Native Americans. She chose a multitude of hand-tinted, black-and-white images of brands that use Indian images and names to sell their product. This collection was made in response to America's
quincentennial celebration of
Christopher Columbus' discovery of the Americas.
Reclaiming Cultural Ownership; Challenging Indian Stereotypes This collection consisted of 36 black-and-white documentary style images of Native American people living every day life. This series worked to challenge the way that Indian people are portrayed by the media.
Resisting the Mission: Filling the Silence In 2017, Goshorn created the work,
Resisting the Mission: Filling the Silence, consisting of 14 cylindrical paper baskets discussing the period of U.S. history when Native children were removed from their families to attend government-run residential schools. This work uses photographs of Native children who attended the
Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania. Some of her relatives had attended Carlisle. She drew from archival materials in the
Smithsonian. The
National Museum of the American Indian acquired
Resisting the Mission: Filling the Silence from Goshorn in 2019. == Art career ==