ToplineOutdoor apparel company Patagonia, famous for its progressive activism, offered to drop its trademark lawsuit against Pattie Gonia if the drag performer stops selling merchandise and using the company’s logos, while also apologizing for any harm the suit caused within the LGBTQ community. Patagonia filed a trademark lawsuit against drag queen Pattie Gonia in January. (Photo by Rich Polk/Getty Images for NRDC)Getty Images for NRDCKey FactsPatagonia said in a post on Instagram late Sunday night it wants to resolve the lawsuit and wishes it had not been necessary to take legal action, adding it shares “common ground” with Pattie Gonia, who is an environmental activist.Patagonia said in its post it presented an offer to Pattie Gonia to drop the lawsuit if, in addition to the other conditions, the drag performer withdraws trademark applications made to protect the Pattie Gonia name.The apparel company filed a lawsuit in January against Pattie Gonia, whose real name is Wyn Wiley, alleging the drag performer violated an agreement previously made with the company by filing to trademark the name Pattie Gonia, departing from the “discrete use of a persona to engage in activism” to “launch a wide-ranging commercial enterprise under the PATTIE GONIA brand.”Pattie Gonia responded to the lawsuit in a post on Instagram last week, accusing the company of “trying to erase an activist” and betraying its mission of saving the environment, noting the Patagonia region in South America predates both the company and drag queen by centuries.Pattie Gonia denied having used the Patagonia logo in merchandise, saying the lawsuit “cherry-picks a few examples of playful parody and fan art,” also noting drag is “built on parody, puns and jokes.”The lawsuit has sparked a divided response online, with trademark attorney Josh Gerben telling NBC News Patagonia has an “obligation” to protect its trademark, while supporters of Pattie Gonia flooded the apparel company’s Instagram with comments urging it to drop the lawsuit.