This map shows a sample of our many incredible Inuit artists, with ways to find out more about them online.
You may search by an artist’s name, location or medium if you are familiar with them already, or zoom into a region and discover the artists listed in that area!
Tunnganarniq is an Inuktitut word meaning welcoming and inclusive. Tunnganarniq Live is a welcoming, inclusive and collaborative live TV platform, to give people access and engagement with Inuit art by Inuit artists sharing live TV content.… Read more
Arsaniq Deer is from a small village of around 500 people, Quaqtaq, Nunavik QC. She's 22 and lives in Montreal. She likes sewing, painting, beading, embroidery, and tattooing traditional Inuit tattoos.
Willow Allen was born and raised in Inuvik. She moved to pursue a degree in social work at MacEwan university in Edmonton. It was a few weeks later there that she found her signing with a modelling agency. Her modelling journey has taken her to Montreal, Toronto, Singapore, and New York City in the last 3 years.… Read more
Host Margaret Noksana sits down with model and aspiring social worker Willow Allen to talk about modelling, travelling the world and her future plans LIVE on the Tunnganarniq Show, March 2, 2022.
Gailann Raddi is a mother, seamstress and subsistence hunter and harvester from Inuvik, NU. She is dedicated to learning and perfecting her own unique sewing patterns that are not only beautiful but functional as well. She currently works for the Nihtat Gwich'in Council delivering Jordan's Principal daily youth programming.… Read more
Host Margaret Noksana from Inuvik welcomes a round table of guests for a discussion on the eve of the first ever National Day of Truth and Reconciliation. Originally broadcast on September 29, 2021. Produced by NITV in partnership with the Inuvialuit Communications Society.
Brian Wade advocates for subsistence harvesting and active cultural practice being the key to Inuvialuit livelihood and well-being. He sheds light on what it is like to rebuild one's own connection with culture, going from an Inuvialuk living in an urban center to reclaiming his roots at home in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region.