Racette is a board member of the Aboriginal Curatorial Collective, and her artwork promotes Aboriginal and Aboriginal women's histories. Racette's paintings have been featured in a number of publications, and her work "The Flower Beadwork People" was published by the Gabriel Dumont Institute in 1992. Other artworks on display at the institute, created by Racette, include "Keep Your Spirit Free," and the collection of "Flags of the Métis" Racette's artwork is also exhibited at the Mackenzie Art Gallery in Saskatchewan. She is a member of the Saskatchewan Arts Board, and also serves on the board of the Saskatchewan Heritage Foundation. In 2009-2010, as a Resident Scholar at the School for Advanced Research, Racette created an exhibition on Material Culture as Encoded Objects and Memory. In 2013, she was an exhibition consultant for the Montreal McCord Museum's "Wearing Our Identity : The First People's Collection." Racette has been mentioned as an artist in the book titled " The Artist Herself : Self-Portraits by Canadian Historical Women Artists."
Writing
Racette has illustrated several books, including The Flower Beadwork People, Stories of the Road Allowance People, Flies to the Moon, and Little Voice. She co-edited Clearing a Path: New Ways of Seeing Traditional Indigenous Art with Dr. Carmen Robertson. She has also published articles and essays in scholarly publications. Her scholarly background is in art history, education, history, anthropology and Native studies.
Artwork
Racette creates paintings and multimedia works. Her art has been featured in solo, group, and museum exhibitions, and she has won awards for her illustrated children's books. In 2012, she worked with project creator and lead coordinator, Christi Belcourt, to co-curate "Walking With Our sisters", a commemorative art installation that honours the lives of the hundreds of missing or murdered Indigenous women in Canada. The installation has toured since 2013, with exhibitions in Edmonton, Regina, Parry Sound, Winnipeg, Sault Ste. Marie, Flin Flon, Thunder Bay, Saskatoon, Yellowknife, Whitehorse, Comox, Ottawa, Akwesasne, North Battleford, and Brandon. In this exhibition, hundreds of artists donated hand-made moccasins to honour the lives of Aboriginal women.