05/31/2026
"A lot people think that homosexuality, being gay, being q***r is new, and it's not."—Giiwedin
Welcome to "Q***ring Indigeneity" artist focus: GIIWEDIN
One of 16 artists featured in "Q***ring Indigeneity," Giiwedin (any pronouns) is an Anishinaabe Two-Spirit water protector and educator who uses social media to share about their culture, Indigenous and environmental issues, and Q***r Indigenous history and acceptance. He is an enrolled member of the St. Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin and grew up on the Leech Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota, home to the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe. Giiwedin graduated from the University of Minnesota, Morris, with a BA in Biology and resisted the construction of the Line 3 Pipeline with their comrades in northern Minnesota. Their Instagram () has 214k followers, and they were GLAAD and Teen Vogue’s 20 under 20 honoree for LGBTQ+ changemakers in 2022.
Artist Statement
My art connects with the "Q***ring Indigeneity" exhibit because I’m Q***r and Indigenous. I identify as Two-Spirit and have known this since I was a kid. And ever since I was a kid, I drew mermaids and other water spirits that were integral to my people’s culture. Anishinaabe people are woodland people, but we are also the people of water. We migrated westward to the place where food grows on water, and I believe this influenced and influences my art. The materials I use are just pen and paper, simple tools available to anyone and the only tools I had access to as a kid. I hope my art instills a reverence for the water if that reverence is not already there in the viewer.
See Giiwedin's artwork in "Q***ring Indigeneity": https://mmaa.org/q***ring-indigeneity
Free admission. Open Thursday–Sunday, 10 am–4 pm.
***ringIndigeneity