Walker is noted for using traditional and digital printmaking tools and techniques to design and print large-scale contemporary lithographs that emulate turn of the centurypropaganda posters. In his juror's statement for the Southern Printmaking Biennale V exhibition catalog, Matthew Rebholz asserted that her work reflects contentious U.S. foreign policy issues and the implications of endless occupation, while other critics have pointed to Walker's use of nostalgia as a means of questioning persistent domestic relationships between industry, agriculture, and mechanized warfare. In an exhibition review of Walker's work at Slugfest Gallery in Austin, TX, USA, critic Jason Urban suggests that, as opposed to clarifying any particular issues-based political agenda, the dystopic content of Walker's work instead extolls propaganda for its own sake, and critic Arthur Nodens similarly asserts that "Political stances or calls to action are elusive," and that Walker instead "appears more interested in interaction with the tradition of nostalgic falsehoods, rallying points in discordant times." Reviewing a three-person exhibition that included Walker's lithographs at the Vernon Public Art Gallery in 2015, essayist Carolyn MacHardy states that "Walker's works simulate propaganda but they are not propaganda: it is difficult to identify the authority behind the work and it is not always clear what type of action the viewer is being goaded into." In her own artist statement Walker is quoted as saying that " points critically to both the violent and the bucolic - the guns and wars and tractors and engines of industry, and the language of national pride grafted to principles of duty, sacrifice, and honor - that have long been and remain its allies and infrastructure." Oversimplified directives and bold imagery - traditional tactics of visual propagandists meant to elicit automatic emotional allegiance to agitation or integration activities - are in Walker's work pitted against themselves to reveal a complex web of self-generated mythologies that continue to define contemporary visual articulations of labor, national pride, patriarchy, and patriotism.
Exhibitions and collections
Walker's work has been included in juried and invitational international group, biennial, and triennial exhibitions, including the Okanagan Print Triennale, inaugural SPI Self Publishers Invitational exhibition at New York Print Week, the Biennale Internationale d’Estampe Contemporaine de Trois-Rivières, The 7th Duoro Biennial, The Boston Printmakers North American Print Biennial, The International Print Triennial-Kraków, The Oso Bay Biennial XVII, The Okanagan Print Triennial, The Sanbao Printmaking Biennial, The Southern Printmaking Biennial V, and The Pacific States Biennial National Print Exhibition. She has had solo exhibitions at The Reach Gallery Museum, Abbotsford, and the Gallery at SNAP, Edmonton Her work has been included in curated group exhibitions at the Fort Wayne Museum of Art, , Ottawa, amongst others. Her work is housed in multiple public collections, including the collections of the Denver Art Museum, the Chazen Museum of Art, the Paul and Lulu Hilliard University Art Museum, the Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute, the Leifur Eiriksson Foundation, the Museum of Texas Tech University, and the Southern Graphics Council International Print Archive.