asinnajaq (born 1991) 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. In 2025, a selection of her photographs were displayed at the National Gallery of Canada after she won the 2024 New Generation Photography Award.
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.
Isabella Rose Rowan-Weetaluktuk was born in Kuujjuaq, Nunavik in 1991. She completed Bachelor of Fine Arts at Freda Diesing School of Northwest Coast Art in 2015, before completing an MFA film at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax.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. ÃÂ Early in her artistic career she assisted her father while he worked on Timuti (2012), a short film based in Inukjuak, the home of their extended family.
asinnajaq is currently based out of Montreal, Quebec.ÃÂ She is the niece of Daniel Weetaluktuk, the first Inuk archeologist in Canada, who is the subject of her upcoming short film Daniel.
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. She directed her award-winning short film Three Thousand in 2017 while working for the National Film Board and drew on their archival film collection for portions of the film's contents.
Alongside her artistic work, asinnajaq has led multiple Inuit culture workshops at the McCord Museum with her mother Carol Rowan. In 2018, she co-created áÂÂáªáÂÂáÂÂáÂÂáÂÂᦠTilliraniit a three-day film festival celebrating Inuit art presented at FOFA Gallery in Montréal. She was part of the curatorial teams for the Canadian Pavilion at the 2019 Venice Biennale and joined group of other female curators during the opening of the Inuit Art Centre, Qaumajuq, at Winnipeg Art Gallery in 2020.
In 2020 asinnajaq received a Sobey Art Award for the entire body of her artistic work.
In 2024, she became the guest curator for the exhibition áÂÂáÂȇªáÂÂáÂÂá uummaqutik: essence of life at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, presenting selections from the museum's collection of Inuit art. That same year, she won the 2024 New Generation Photography Award and had her photographic work displayed in the National Gallery of Canada.