Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory challenges assumptions about the female body and the land in an uaajeerneq performance for video set in the landscape behind her home in Iqualit. Uaajeerneq is a Greenlandic mask dance involving a wild array of expressions that play with elements of fear, humour, and sexuality. The black face paint represents the extremes of life in the Arctic, along with the magical and unknown realms of existence. The red of the mask symbolizes the power of life, love, and the temperament of relations. The white streaks evoke bones and thus the ancestors, as well as a clearness of the mind. Williamson Bathory uses uaajeerneq as a strategy to prepare her community—the Inuit of Nunavut— to face difficult questions around governance and extremes of life in the North through creativity. The work transcends the discourse of healing and operates as a forceful assertion of power that visually comments on the oppression that Indigenous women and the environment confront under settler colonialism and extractive capitalism.