Tenille K. Campbell is a Dene and Métis artist from English River First Nation in Northern Saskatchewan. She completed her MFA in Creative Writing from UBC and is enrolled in her English Ph.D. at University of Saskatchewan. She is the artist behind sweetmoon photography, specializing in photographing Indigenous people over the last decade, and the co-creator of tea&bannock, an online collective blog featuring the photographs and stories of Indigenous women throughout Canada. Her poetry collections, #IndianLovePoems (Signature Editions, 2017) and Nedi Nezu (Arsenal Press, 2021), focuses on Indigenous Erotica—using humour, storytelling and sensuality to reclaim and explore ideas of Indigenous sexuality. She currently resides in Saskatoon, SK.
still, we dance is part of a larger series focusing on Indigenous women in their chosen forms of dance, from pow-wow to ballet to salsa, on the land they feel powerful on, creating a visual connection between women, art and the land they travel.
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