Tanya Tagaq joined Williamson Bathory for a collaborative response to Timiga nunalu, sikulu (My body, the land and the ice), presented in partnership with Vancouver’s Native Education College. Having witnessed Timiga nunalu sikulu on video for the first time, Tagaq responded with a range of vocalizations informed by throat singing that evoke the land, animals, and the more-thanhuman world. Her vocalizations animated Williamson Bathory’s transformation into uaajeerneq, an expression of the power of life in all its iterations. Comfortable in claiming their own and one another’s sexuality, they came together to sing as sisters, the rhythm and the gravel of their voices intermingling, pushing, and pulling in balanced tension, in call and response—a shared animation between body and voice.