Jaime Morse is a Cree-Métis cultural dancer, curator, visual artist, and storyteller from northern Alberta. She grew up in the mixed Métis community of Lac La Biche, AB with her German mother and her father from Buffalo Lake Métis Settlement, part of the Métis Settlements General Council (MSGC). Since 2000, Jaime has lived, worked, and raised her children on Anishinaabe Algonquin Territory, also known as Ottawa. 

She is the founder and owner of Indigenous Walks, a walk-and-talk tour through downtown Ottawa from an Indigenous perspective that explores monuments, landscape, architecture, and art. Since 2014, these tours have invited thousands of participants to see the city through a new lens. Jaime has also worked at the National Gallery of Canada since 2013, where she is the first Educator of Indigenous Programs and Outreach. 

As a performer, Jaime learned Métis jigging from Pauline Huppie-Parsons, Daryl Gardipy, and Bruce Sinclair, later co-founding Jig on the Fly and then Jaime and the Jiglets with her three children. She went on to form Prairie Fire once her children became professional Métis jiggers, with one of their most significant performances held at the Space and Aviation Museum for the Presidential visit of Joe and Dr. Jill Biden alongside Canadian leaders. 

Jaime is also a strong advocate for Métis fish scale art, sharing this practice with new generations of Métis artists. Her international work has taken her to UN forums on Indigenous rights, state visits with the Governor General, and Indigenous conferences worldwide.