Moe Clark

âpihtawikosisâniskwêw (Michif/mixed-settler) multidisciplinary artist, educator, Somatic Experiencing Practioner (SEP™) and vocalist, Moe Clark (she/they) is a 2Spirit singing thunderbird. Born and raised in Treaty 7, Moe is a proud member of the Métis Nation of Alberta, and currently resides in Tio’tiá:ke/ Mooniyang/ Montréal (QC). A dedicated nêhiyawêwin (Plains Cree language) and Michif language learner, Moe collaborates intimately with Elders and knowledge keepers to advance language resurgence through song-based practices. She works across disciplines of vocal improvisation, sound design, land-based oskapêwis facilitation (ceremonial Elder apprenticeship), and performance creation.

As a Somatic Experiencing Practitioner (SEP™) and creative arts facilitator, Moe’s work in community reinforces collective liberation, embodied healing, and intergenerational transmission while supporting thriving futures for 2Spirit Indigenous relatives and other marginalized kin. They anchor 2S Michif and Plains Cree wholism teachings, while reinforcing body-based practices as “land-back.” Recently, Moe completed their interdisciplinary Master of Arts at Concordia University.
In 2025 Clark was awarded a Concordia Social Justice Fellow and was the recipient of a Certificate of Excellence from the National Network Environment for Indigenous Health Research for her innovative Master’s work titled: “Healing through tastawayihk (2Spirit) Drumming and Singing: Resurgent Practices of Reclamation and Cultural Continuity.”

Moe’s last solo album “Within” toured across North America and her collaborative video poem “nitahkôtân” won best Indigenous language music video at the ImagiNative film festival. Moe was poet of honour at the 2014 Canadian Festival of Spoken word, and in 2024, they won the Ian Ferrier Spoken Word Prize through the Quebec Writers’ Federation. Since 2017 they’ve hosted mâmawi musique, a weekly podcast on Espaces Autochtones, highlighting Indigenous music. Moe has performed the world over, including the Lincoln Centre (US), Sydney Opera House (AU) and Origins Festival in London (UK).