
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Today, we're excited to talk to Penny Kagigebi. Penny is a direct descendant of the White Earth Nation. She is a 2-Spirit queer community collaborator, artist, curator and teacher. She focuses on birch bark basketry and quill boxes and recently curated Queering Indigeneity for the Minnesota Museum of American Art, on exhibit from September 18, 2025 to August 16, 2026.
Penny turned to art after the death of her son in 2008. She spent a year making gifts to put in the bundle she was sending to him. This work opened her to the healing power of art and to the idea that she is an artist.
In her art, she intertwines traditional craft with her identity as 2-Spirit/Native queer, whether it's rainbow colors or a fresh take on design. She also works to help other 2-Spirt/Native queer artists find their gifts and their medicines and share them with the community.
That vision informs the Minnesota Museum of American Art exhibit Queering Indigeneity. As a first-time curator, Penny had the opportunity to reach out to 2-Spirit/Native queer artists from across the Upper Midwest and ask, “What's your wildest idea? What do you have in your back pocket that you haven't been able to put forward yet?”
Penny lives in Detroit Lakes with her husband Rick, who is also an artist.
-----
Hosts / Producers: Leah Lemm, Cole Premo
Editor: Britt Aamodt
Editorial support: Emily Krumberger
Mixing & mastering: Chris Harwood
4.9
4848 ratings
Today, we're excited to talk to Penny Kagigebi. Penny is a direct descendant of the White Earth Nation. She is a 2-Spirit queer community collaborator, artist, curator and teacher. She focuses on birch bark basketry and quill boxes and recently curated Queering Indigeneity for the Minnesota Museum of American Art, on exhibit from September 18, 2025 to August 16, 2026.
Penny turned to art after the death of her son in 2008. She spent a year making gifts to put in the bundle she was sending to him. This work opened her to the healing power of art and to the idea that she is an artist.
In her art, she intertwines traditional craft with her identity as 2-Spirit/Native queer, whether it's rainbow colors or a fresh take on design. She also works to help other 2-Spirt/Native queer artists find their gifts and their medicines and share them with the community.
That vision informs the Minnesota Museum of American Art exhibit Queering Indigeneity. As a first-time curator, Penny had the opportunity to reach out to 2-Spirit/Native queer artists from across the Upper Midwest and ask, “What's your wildest idea? What do you have in your back pocket that you haven't been able to put forward yet?”
Penny lives in Detroit Lakes with her husband Rick, who is also an artist.
-----
Hosts / Producers: Leah Lemm, Cole Premo
Editor: Britt Aamodt
Editorial support: Emily Krumberger
Mixing & mastering: Chris Harwood
91,088 Listeners
38,453 Listeners
43,643 Listeners
38,724 Listeners
27,231 Listeners
5,701 Listeners
14,587 Listeners
112,376 Listeners
8,996 Listeners
10,229 Listeners
5 Listeners
15 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
1 Listeners
0 Listeners
2 Listeners
1 Listeners
2 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
5 Listeners
16,144 Listeners
2 Listeners
10 Listeners
41,489 Listeners
1 Listeners
10,816 Listeners
1,178 Listeners
5,717 Listeners
0 Listeners