Performance

Film Premiere: Threading Echoes by Shion Skye Carter with Mayumi Lashbrook and Hitoko Okada

Person dressed in orange dancing in front of black backdrop

Shion Skye Carter, Threading Echos. Photo by Wakana Shimamura

FREE Event

Tickets are not currently available.

Performance

Film Premiere: Threading Echoes by Shion Skye Carter with Mayumi Lashbrook and Hitoko Okada

Tuesday, October 25, 5 PM
Film Premiere: Threading Echoes by Shion Skye Carter with Mayumi Lashbrook and Hitoko Okada

Join us on Zoom for the debut of Threading Echoes, a genre-defying dance performance that tells the story of shifu, a time-honoured, textile practice from sixth-century Japan. Created and performed by 2022 AGO X RBC Artist-in-Residence Shion Skye Carter and her artist collaborators Mayumi Lashbrook and Hitoko Okada, the performance will be followed by a discussion.

Shion Skye Carter (she/they) is a dance artist from Tajimi, Japan, who lives and dedicates time to her artistic practice in Vancouver, Canada as a guest on the unceded, ancestral lands of the Coast Salish peoples. Through choreography hybridized with heritage artforms that interact with digital and sculptural objects, Shion’s work looks inward to the facets of her intersectional identity as a lens to process the world around her. As co-founder of olive theory, an interdisciplinary duo with musician Stefan Nazarevich, she collaborates to experiment at the intersection between embodied performance, installation art, and live sound. Shion has performed across Canada, having worked with artists such as Vanessa Goodman (Action at a Distance), Wen Wei Dance, and Ziyian Kwan (Dumb Instrument Dance). She holds a BFA from Simon Fraser University, and is the 2021/2022 recipient of the Iris Garland Emerging Choreographer Award.

Mayumi Lashbrook is a mixed-race Japanese-Canadian settler from Tkaronto who seeks to expose, challenge and rectify systems of oppression by creating innovative, introspective and inclusive dance theatre. Her primary practices span performance, choreography, education and Artistic Direction. She performs as a way to find connection, commonality and vulnerability in others. Mayumi graduated on the Dean’s list from the University X (previously known as Ryerson University) Theatre Performance Dance program. She is the Co-Artistic Director of Aeris Körper, a facilitator of Dreamwalker Dance’s Conscious Bodies methodology, an active member of Wind in the Leaves Collective and the Communications and Outreach Manager for the Canadian Dance Assembly. Most recently she received choreographic mentorship from Peggy Baker, was resident in the L’AiR Arts (Paris, France) intercultural artistic exchange, and a commissioned choreographer in CanAsian’s GRIT: Short Dances with dramaturgy from Nina Lee Aquino. She is currently studying Butoh and composition in a year-long mentorship with renowned Japanese-Canadian dance theatre artist Denise Fujiwara. 

Hitoko Okada is an interdisciplinary fibre artist, storyteller, community arts organizer and curator currently living in Hamilton, Ontario. Okada has publicly presented washi-based installation work, curatorial work, performed live stories and developed and delivered community-engaged programs for more than 20 years in Vancouver, Toronto, Burlington and Hamilton. She has continued to develop her textile craft practice through artist residencies and workshops at the Haystack School of Craft in Deer Isle, Maine and the Kawashima School of Textiles in Kyoto, Japan. She is a recipient of the Hamilton City Arts Award for Established Artist in Craft; a core member of the Hamilton Seven Storytelling Collective, and a member of the Burlington Handweavers and Spinners Guild. She is currently developing a research-based body of work exploring the history and ancestral knowledge of cultural heritage crafts of Japanese indigo, kakishibu dye and shifu weaving, supported by the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council of the Arts.

For requests for Verbal Description, American Sign Language (ASL) interpretation and/or live captioning for online and onsite programming, please provide three weeks notice in advance of the event date. The AGO will make every effort to provide accommodation for requests made with less than three weeks notice. Please note that automated captioning is available for all online programs. For onsite visits, the AGO offers these supports for an accessible visit. Please contact us to make a request for these or other accessibility accommodations. Learn more about accessibility at the AGO.

SIMILAR EVENTS

Performance
Friday May 3, 7 pm
Be the first to find out about AGO exhibitions and events, get the behind-the-scenes scoop and book tickets before it’s too late.
You can unsubscribe at any time.