b'PHOTOGRAPHYPhoto credit: Tenille K. Campbell.THROUGH ANBy Bryan HansenINDIGENOUS LENSPhotographers CoraC ora Kavyaktok, an Inuit photographer from Cambridge Bay, Kavyaktok and TenilleNunavut, and Tenille K. Campbell, a Dene/Mtis author and photographer from English River First Nation, Sask., charac-K. Campbell areterize the transformative power of Indigenous photography reclaiming Indigenousin reshaping narratives and celebrating the diverse experiences of women within womens understandingIndigenous communities.Kavyaktoks journey into photography began at a young age. My best friend and I of culture and beautywould go to the Northern Store and buy them all out of Polaroid film, she remin-through photography isces. We would go back to her place, and she would dress up for me and I would take her photo. This early passion evolved over the years, leading her to specialize in portrait, event and wedding photography through her company, Little Inuk Photography. Her work has been featured in various publications, including Inuit Art Quarterly and Reawakening Our Ancestors Lines, a book documenting the Inuit 44Spring/Summer 2024'