Asinnajaq
Canadian artist and filmmaker

Asinnajaq

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
Canadian artist and filmmaker
A.K.A.
Isabella Weetaluktuk, Isabella Rowan-Weetaluktuk, Isabella Rose Rowan-Weetaluktuk, Isabella Rose Weetaluktuk
Gender:
Female
Places:
Birth:
1991(Inukjuak, Kativik Regional Government, Nord-du-Québec, Canada)
Education:
NSCAD University
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Biography Work Awards and nominations
The details
Biography

Introduction

Asinnajaq (born 1991), a.k.a. Isabella Rose Rowan-Weetaluktuk, is a Canadian Inuk visual artist, writer, filmmaker, and curator, from Inukjuak, Quebec. She is most noted for her 2017 film Three Thousand, which received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Short Documentary Film at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards.

She has also been active as a curator of Inuit art and video projects, including the Canadian pavilion at the 58th Venice Biennale and the Inuit Art Centre at the Winnipeg Art Gallery.

Biography

Asinnajaq was born in Inukjuak, Nunavik, and is currently based out of Montreal, Quebec. The name “Asinnajaq” is a family name that means “nomadic outlier” in the local Inuktitut dialect. Her mother, Carol Rowan, is a university professor, while her father, Jobie Weetaluktuk, is a filmmaker. She studied film at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design at the university in Halifax. She assisted her father on Timuti (2012), a film he made in Inukjuak, home of their extended family. She is the niece of Daniel Weetaluktuk, the first Inuk archeologist in Canada, who is the subject of her upcoming short film Daniel.

Work

Through her artistic work, Asinnajaq draws her inspiration from the notion of respect for human rights, and the desire to explore her Inuit heritage. Her practice is grounded in research and collaboration. Her short film Upinnaqusittik, made in 2016, premiered at iNuit Blanche, the first ever circumpolar arts festival in St. John's. While working for the National Film Board, drawing on their archives, she directed her film Three Thousand in 2017. Alongside her artistic work, she has led Inuit culture workshops at the McCord Museum with her mother. Asinnajaq was also part of the curatorial team at the Canadian Pavilion at the 2019 Venice Biennale. In 2020 Asinnajaq received a Sobey Art Award.

Awards and nominations

Year Award Festival/Institution Location
2019 "Ô Canada — Québec, Premières Nations, etc." Program Festival international du court métrage France
2018 Best Indigenous Short Film Award Skábmagovat Film Festival Finland
2018 International Indigenous Award Wairoa Maori Film Festival New Zealand—Aotearoa
2017 Short and Medium Length Competition Rencontres Internationales du Documentaire de Montréal Canada
2017 Imagine Native Film and Kent Monkman Award for Best Exposition


Media Arts Festival Canada
2017 Indigenous Art Award REVEAL Canada