-
Awards
Dora Mavor Moore Award Nominees and Winners
Congratulations to the following artists who were nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore Award for their performances at CanAsian!
Peter Chin, Sirijwa
Nominated for Outstanding Performance 2011
Natasha Bakht, Dafeena
Nominated for Outstanding Choreography 2010
Alexander MacSween, Dafeena
Nominated for Outstanding Original Sound Design/Composition 2010
Charles Hong, Joo Hyung Kim, Sosun Suh, Choonengmu
Winner of Outstanding Sound Design/Composition 2008
Cokaseki, TooBoe – The Howl
Nominated for Outstanding Production 2007
Keiko Ninomiya and Kinya “Zulu” Tsuruyama, You See the Tree, You Don’t See the Forest
Nominated for Outstanding New Choreography, 2007
Sudarshan Belasare, Uma
Nominated for Outstanding Performance 2007
Andrea Nann, SOURCE
Nominated for Outstanding Dance Performance 2005
Fisherman’s Art Factory YAN-SHU, HA-SU – breath of lotus flower
Nominated for Outstanding Choreography and Outstanding Dance Performance 2005
Roger Sinha Danse, LOHA/Thok
Winner of Outstanding Dance Performance (Tom Casey) and nominated for Outstanding Choreography 2004
Tedd Robinson, Heroic Garb and Intimate Marching
Nominated for Outstanding Choreography and Outstanding Dance Performance 2001 -
-
Line Up
Mainstage A - May 1 & 2 Mainstage B - May 3 & 4 Late Night - May 2, 3 & 4 -
About Us
Who we are
CanAsian Dance presents and cultivates exceptional dance inspired by Asian ideas and expressions. Led by Artistic Director Denise Fujiwara, CanAsian has earned critical acclaim for its world-class programming. This includes the biennial CanAsian International Dance Festival – a weeklong festival of performances, matinees, films and workshops that reflect dance traditions from across Asia; as well as annual artistic, educational and professional development activities.
Staff
- Denise Fujiwara
Artistic Director - Adina Herling
General Manager - Farheen Beg
Manager of Audience Development and Engagement
Board of Directors
- Anne Yourt
President - Noora Sagarwala
Secretary-Treasurer - Allen Kaeja
Past President
- Denise Fujiwara
-
2013 CanAsian International Dance Festival
presented in association with Harbourfront Centre
April 28 – May 12, 2013
The 2013 CanAsian International Dance Festival features exceptional dance inspired by Asian ideas and expressions. Come witness outstanding artists from Canada, Japan, Singapore and Austria performing traditional and contemporary dance work, including a whirling dervish on fire. Beyond dance, experience film, contemplative workshops in writing and calligraphy, Noodle Night, and a magical Labyrinth walk to the soothing sounds of Japanese shakuhachi flute.
Hope to see you there!
-
Press
“Good art should satisfy on every level – emotional, spiritual, aesthetic. The two programs of the CanAsian International Dance Festival fulfilled that mandate.”
- Paula Citron, Globe and Mail, February 26, 2011“Where cultural distinctions are concerned Toronto’s biennial CanAsian International Dance Festival casts the net generously wide.”
- Michael Crab, Toronto Start, February 24, 2011“The dance evening is profoundly moving on every level – physical, visual and emotional. …This first program of CanAsian is not to be missed.”
- Paula Citron, The Globe and Mail, May 8, 20093 1/2 STARS out of 4!
“Program A, repeating tonight at the Fleck Dance Theatre, has as its centrepiece a moving and quite astonishing Butoh dance, quick silver, performed by Tokyo-based performer Ko Murobushi.”
- Susan Walker, Toronto Star, May 8, 2009“Denise Fujiwara has curated the 11th annual CanAsian Dance Festival, under the umbrella title “From Tradition to Innovation”, and judging from Program A, her title is certainly justified. The three dance pieces bring together Korean, Japanese and hybrid contemporary experiences, performed by artists of the highest caliber in their respective area of expertise. – Pure rapturous delight for an audience.”
- Keith Garebian, Stage and Page Website, 2009“Toronto’s dance scene is going to be hard pressed to meet this level of performance. Forget Lord of Rings, or the National Ballet of Canada, or the opera – Transformations is performance that must not be missed.”
- Kristine, blogto.com“…bigger and better than ever before”
- Toronto Star, 2005“A triumphant celebration of Asian roots”
- The Globe and Mail, 2005 -
Student Matinees
May is Asian Heritage Month and the 2013 CanAsian International Dance Festival is a great opportunity for elementary, junior and secondary students to experience outstanding artists performing both traditional and contemporary dance from a wide selection of Asian cultures.
Student matinees offer an excellent opportunity for teachers to fulfill aspects of their dance curriculum and for students to develop a compassionate understanding of other cultures while experiencing a live dance performance by Canadian and international artists.
CanAsian Dance’s 2013 Student Matinee Performances will take place May 3, 2013 at Harbourfront Centre’s Fleck Dance Theatre in Toronto, Ontario.
All classes are provided with a comprehensive study guide well in advance of the Festival. Our student matinees are very popular and sell out quickly. Book now!
For more information and tickets please call 416-593-8455 or email outreach (at) canasiandancefestival.com.
-
Buy Tickets
Tickets now on sale! To purchase tickets please call the Harbourfront Centre Box Office at 416-973-4000 or buy tickets here. For tickets to our student matinees or to register for Festival workshops, please email outreach (at) canasiandance.com
Festival Pass – $50*
See both Mainstage A and Mainstage B, and the film showing for $50! Plus receive VIP seating for our Late Night Performance of Ziya Azazi’s Ember at the WestJet Stage.
Mainstage A
Buy one Mainstage show, get the second for only $15
Adults: $30
Students, Seniors, CADA: $25
Groups of 6+: $20 each
Mainstage B
Buy one Mainstage show, get the second for only $15
Adults: $30
Students, Seniors, CADA: $25
Groups of 6+: $20 each
Film showing
$10
Late Night Performance
Free
*not valid for Wednesday May 1 performance. -
Get Involved
Want to get more involved with CanAsian Dance? Here’s how:Volunteers
CanAsian Dance has many exciting volunteer opportunities. Join a large group of individuals who donate their time, expertise and special skills to help make the Festival run. Have fun, meet new people, enjoy performances, and participate in a range of activities.Board of Directors
Do you have a passion for the arts? Do you have expertise in arts management, marketing, fundraising, financial management, law or non-profit governance? Consider joining our dynamic Board of Directors.
For more information, email info (at) canasiandancefestival.com.Call to Artists
CanAsian Dance’s Programming Committee is interested in the outstanding performance of traditional dance art forms, distinctive new choreography that comes out of traditional dance vocabularies and original contemporary dance works that integrate Asian principles and concepts. Artists are chosen based on a call to artists, which is distributed approximately 18 months prior to each Festival. The next call to artists will be posted in the fall of 2013, for the 2015 Festival. To be notified of our call to artists please join our mailing list. -
Sustaining CanAsian Dance
CanAsian Dance has played an increasingly vital role in the artistic life of Toronto over the past 16 years. A few good reasons to support CanAsian Dance:- Artistic Director Denise Fujiwara and her colleagues have presented an extraordinary level of artistic excellence over the last 15 years. The CanAsian International Dance Festival continues to showcase some of Canada’s finest and most innovative artists together with international dancers.
- CanAsian Dance works to create an atmosphere of understanding and acceptance, crossing boundaries of all kinds through its presentations of contemporary, classical and traditional dance forms, and drawing from the heritages of many Asian countries.
- We stimulate Toronto’s wider dance community by bringing master dance artists from around the world to inspire and teach, and by celebrating our own masters and providing opportunities for them to share their work.
- We help to build Toronto’s future audiences by welcoming youth into the theatre and by bringing both dance artists and study guides into their schools.
- The creative energy and community feeling generated by CanAsian Dance are an important part of what makes Toronto a great city to live in.
-
Jocelyne Montpetit Danse
(Montreal)
← back
Mainstage A: May 1 and 2 @ 8:00 PM
Fleck Dance Theatre
Hailed as the Best Performance of 2011 by Montreal’s La Presse Newspaper, Jocelyne Montpetit’s riveting solo La danseuse malade (The Ailing Dancer) makes its Toronto debut as part of CanAsian’s Mainstage Program A on May 1 and 2, 2013 at the Fleck Dance Theatre.
“For the last 10 years, I have been cherishing the dream of a piece inspired by a book that has yet to be translated in the West: Tatsumi Hijikata’s La Danseuse malade (The Sick Dancer). Cofounder of the butoh movement with Kazuo Ohno, Hijikata was, in his lifetime, a mythical figure in the Japanese arts community. He died in 1986, and his myth lives on… In 1983, he wrote La Danseuse malade (The Sick Dancer). Complex and impossible to classify, the text was long considered untranslatable. It is a text about becoming. We see someone (Hijikata) becoming something else: woman, child, animal, sick, insane… Female figures appear here and there, and are never named. They are often sickly, and we suppose that they are the seeds that grow into the dance. “When I dance, my sister’s body rises up through me.” Is he referring to his older sister, who left home to sell her body on the streets of Tokyo to escape famine, only to return half-mad and ill? Or: “The dances of the world are starting to stand up, but I start by not being able to stand up. My body, bent over, is in a shape that could regain power; but it was formed with a crack.”
Hijikata’s fundamental beliefs about the body explore this flaw, and it is from my own flaws that I have created my piece. With La danseuse malade I have tried to explore, in an echo of Hijikata’s universe, my own body, my psyche and my childhood. I tried to explore the different facets of this body, which are spun with invisible threads through time and space, and where illness becomes a source for creation. I go back to the dead people, the simpleminded children, the infirm, all that served as material for this master’s choreography. This is more than simply his style, it is his manner, his method of exploring the body, the power to transform and to elevate the soul on stage, that I have taken away from his teaching.
“This work by Jocelyne Montpetit reminds us that life is a stolen moment between death and death.”
-Aline Apostolska, La Presse
Jocelyne Montpetit
Influenced by her experience with the cultures of the far East, Jocelyne Montpetit is among the most unique performers in Canadian dance today. She has built her singular experience through training in a range of disciplines: classical dance with Éric Hyrst, mime with Gilles Maheu, Jean Asselin and Étienne Decroux in Paris, theatre with Jean-Pierre Ronfard and Jerzy Grotowski’s ‘laboratory’ in Poland, as well as acrobatics with l’École de Cirque in Paris. Her meeting with Min Tanaka in 1981 proved to be decisive, and she spent four years in Japan with Kazuo Ohno and Tatsumi Hijikata, the co-founders of Butoh who played a revolutionary role in post-war Japanese culture. She became a member of Min Tanaka’s avant-garde troupe Maijuku and toured with them throughout Japan, and to New York and Paris. Since then, her vision of dance has been rooted in the idea that essence precedes form. For Montpetit, dance is an introspective art, with the potential for multiple metamorphosis through the fusion of body with matter, as well as with intimate and collective memory. -
Susan Lee
(Toronto)
← back
Mainstage A: May 1 and 2 @ 8:00 PMCommissioned by CanAsian Dance for the 2012 Kick Start Festival, Susan Lee performs her solo work Trace Elements as part of CanAsian’s Mainstage Program A on May 1 and 2, 2013 at the Fleck Dance Theatre.
Fleck Dance Theatre
How does one create and enact their personas? How are we perceived? How does the external world affect, and is affected by, the act of creating our identity? These are recurring themes in a number of Susan Lee’s works, and in her latest work Trace Elements, she explores the delicate interplay between inner perception and outer representation in the experience and creation of self.
Susan Lee is a dance artist based in Toronto with a longstanding interest in interdisciplinary collaboration and improvisation in performance. A Dora-nominated dancer, Susan’s professional career spans 20 years, originating roles in numerous works by established Canadian choreographers, which have been performed across Canada, the US, Mexico, Portugal, Sweden, Singapore and Indonesia. Her choreography has been presented in dance festivals and series in Toronto, Ottawa, Halifax and Peterborough. Many of her works combine dance, live music, video and interactive new media. Susan holds a BFA and an MFA in dance from York University and is part-time faculty at York University’s Dance Department. -
inDANCE
(Toronto/Singapore)
← back
Mainstage A: May 1 and 2 @ 8:00 PM
Fleck Dance Theatre
inDANCE premieres I, Cyclops, a new work in collaboration with Singapore’s Bhaskar’s Arts Academy as part of CanAsian’s Mainstage Program A on May 1 and 2, 2013 at the Fleck Dance Theatre
Choreographer Hari Krishnan channels Balanchine’s Jewels through his own tripolar dystopian universe. With exquisite dancers and master musicians from India, Singapore, Canada and the UK, this deliciously dangerous work catapults you between the mystical Siva’s Third Eye and sexy James Marsden’s cool, red shades in Hollywood’s X-Men reboot. I, Cyclops is a post-Modern pan-Asian, multimedia vision that spellbinds you in a dream of seductive eyes & Winnipeg snow; erotic poetry & red silk; marigolds & monsoons; girls’ hips & boys’ chests; fierce multi-armed Goddesses and hottie Super Heroes!
“Hari Krishnan the maverick gadfly is aggressively iconoclastic.”
- Michael Crabb, The Toronto Star
Hari Krishnan is a dancer, choreographer, teacher and dance scholar. He is artistic director of Toronto based company inDANCE as well as a professor of dance in the department of dance at Wesleyan University (Connecticut). An award winning dancemaker who combines classical elegance and populist echoes, Krishnan is frequently commissioned as a forward thinking, innovative choreographer with an original edge to create works in the US, UK, Canada, Singapore and India. He holds a Master’s degree in Dance from York University (Toronto) and is currently completing his PhD in the dance department at Texas Woman’s University.
inDANCE (www.indance.ca) is one of Canada’s most progressive dance companies presenting works that are an original synthesis of artistic director Hari Krishnan’s South Asian and Western aesthetic sensibilities. While respecting the legacy of tradition, inDANCE boldly investigates post-modern evolutions that place the company on a trajectory that brings influences from the West into its strong and confident idiom of contemporary Asian cultures. The company aims to create work that is daring and radical – dancing outside the box. It produces eclectic, sensual, virtuosic and evocative dance creations that challenge dominant discourses on global culture. inDANCE’s work continues to be presented at prestigious venues in the US, Canada, UK, India, Singapore and Malaysia.
Bhaskar’s Arts Academy is an Indian performing arts group based in Singapore. With history dating back to the 1950s, when its founders Mr. K. P. Bhaskar and Mrs. Santha Bhaskar first arrived in Singapore, Bhaskar’s Arts Academy remains one of the longest standing providers of classical Indian performing arts in Singapore. Committed to the high sophistication of traditional dance theatre and the innovative spirit of cross-cultural productions alike, it carries the distinction of being the only Indian arts group in Singapore supported by the National Arts Council’s Annual Grant Scheme. Among its many ventures, it now boasts its own Kathakali troupe, the only of its kind in the world outside India, and also runs a gallery dedicated to Indian visual arts. -
Taketeru Kudo
(Tokyo)
← back
Mainstage B: May 3 and 4 @ 8:30 PM
Fleck Dance Theatre
Taketeru Kudo performs his haunting solo A Vessel of Ruins for CanAsian’s Mainstage Program B May 3 and 4, 2013 at the Fleck Dance Theatre.
From the broken land, from the zones of destruction, from shattered landscapes and from memories, raises the figure of a man, forcing himself to wake-up to a new life. He searches in himself the power to overcome, to make it, to tell people what he saw.
Taketeru Kudo is one of the leading butoh artists of his generation. His creation explores the sphere between the folkloric blood and the wilderness of modernity. While studying theatre he was introduced to butoh through the work of Koichi Tamano in 1989. This encounter decisively changed his path, and he found himself travelling to the US to study with Koichi Tamano. From 1995 to 1998 he worked with the critically acclaimed company Sankaijuku before founding his own company Tokyo Guienkan in 1997. He joined Asbestos-kan, as performer and choreographer, under the direction of Akiko Motofuji (wife of the founder Tatsumi Hijikata) until its closing in 2004. His works have been performed around the world. -
Ziya Azazi
(Vienna)
← back
Late Night: May 2, 3, & 4 at 10:00 PMEmber: Trapped in Fire – a sizzling performance by whirling dervish Ziya Azazi.
WestJet Stage, Harbourfront Centre
FREE
Recently performed for the 2012 London Paralympics Opening Ceremony, Ember: Trapped in Fire is a spectacular work based on repetition and experimental whirling. It is particularly concerned with self-destruction, the pain of the awareness of mortality, and the inevitable ending within the continuous cycle of life. The piece depicts the lifelong battle with individual boundaries, leading one to a growing awareness of the diminishing possibility. Life becomes an irreversible circle, an unavoidable trap. Ember provides no easy answers. Instead it suggests the viewer to consider: what is the beginning and what is the end; where does life start and where does it end; and where does fire stand in this cycle – in the beginning or end?
Ziya Azazi was born in 1969 in Antakya, Turkey and has been based in Vienna, Austria since 1994. In 1999 he was awarded a scholarship by Summer Dance Week Vienna (Dance Web), including an honourable mention by the Ballet International Magazine as “The Most Outstanding Dancer of the Year in Austria” with his full-program performance Unterwegs Tabula Rasa. Ziya has performed in festivals around the world. He has performed for the royal family members of the Netherlands, Thailand and Denmark. As well as numerous European countries, Ziya has performed in Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Egypt, Ecuador, Iran, Israel, Korea, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, Russia, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Venezuela and the USA. -
The Space in Back of You
(Film)
← back
May 4, 2013 at 6:00 PM
Fleck Dance Theatre
207 Queens Quay West, 3rd Floor
Presented in association with Shinsedai Cinema Festival
From Noh and Kabuki through to the mesmerizing and sometimes macabre world of butoh, Japanese dance runs the gamut from conservative and courtly to the outer limits of the avant garde. One choreographer bridges these two worlds beautifully and has changed modern theatre and performance in the process; but you may not have heard her name before — Suzushi Hanayagi. Filmmaker, and longtime assistant to Robert Wilson, Richard Rutowski explores the life and artistic journey of Suzushi Hanayagi in his 2011 documentary The Space in Back of You.
Preceding the feature film, Robert Wilson’s 1989 short film La Femme à la Cafetière also featuring Suzushi Hanayagi, and based on Paul Cezanne’s 1895 painting of the same name.
-
Body Awareness Through Whirling with Ziya Azazi← back
May 5, 2013
2:00 – 6:00 PM
Dovercourt House, 805 Dovercourt Road, 3rd floor
Cost: $60*
Level: All levels
*includes 1 free ticket to a Mainstage performance of your choice
To register, email outreach(at)canasiandance.com
Through whirling, participants will challenge their limits and reach their goal movements within their own genre, spending less energy to achieve a higher level of awareness. Whirling is the means to increased awareness of self, but not the main objective of the workshop.
-
Butoh Workshop
Series← back
Join us for workshops with artists Taketeru Kudo and Jocelyne Montpetit
Butoh with Taketeru Kudo
April 29, 30, and May 1, 2013
12:00 – 4:00 PM
Canadian Contemporary Dance Theatre, 509 Parliament Street, Studio C
Cost: $200 or $75/day*
$190 for CADA members*
All Levels
Explore the evolution of the human body by connecting with memories inside the body. Discover how and where heavy and light, wet and dry manifest in our minds and bodies, and how to transform with this insight.
Butoh with Jocelyne Montpetit
May 3, 2013 from 12:00 – 4:00 PM
Canadian Contemporary Dance Theatre, 509 Parliament Street, Studio C
May 4, 2013 from 2:00 – 6:00 PM
Dovercourt House, 805 Dovercourt Road, 3rd floor
Cost: $125 or $70/day*
$115 for CADA members*
Level: Intermediate / Advanced
Based on internalization of mental images developed by Master Tatsumi Hijikata, this workshop will lead the student to a greater awareness of their external and interior space.
*includes 1 free ticket to a Mainstage performance of your choice
To register, email outreach(at)canasiandance.com -
Contemplative Dance with Denise Fujiwara← back
April 28, May 5 and May 12, 2013
10:30 AM – 1:00 PM
Canadian Contemporary Dance Theatre, 509 Parliament Street, Studio C
Cost: $90 or $35/day*
Level: All levels
Presented in association with Fuijiwara Dance Inventions
*includes 1 free ticket to a Mainstage performance of your choice
To register, email outreach(at)canasiandance.com
A workshop in deep, simple, creative dance. Good training for your body and mind. Using Japanese Butoh and creative post-modern dance principles we’ll work towards becoming more present and therefore more creative while expanding movement vocabulary and conditioning the body for strength and agility. The work can be done at many levels and challenges both the beginner and professional dancer. If you can walk, you can do this dance work.
Denise Fujiwara has over 30 years of performing, choreography and teaching experience. She has worked intensively under Butoh master, Natsu Nakajima and now performs and teaches in Toronto and internationally. She is the Artistic Director of Fujiwara Dance Inventions, the CanAsian Dance Festival and is an adjunct professor at York University. www.fujiwaradance.com
-
Contemplative Writing with Sarah Selecky← back
May 4, 2013
10:00 AM – 1:00 PM
Centre for Social Innovation, 215 Spadina Avenue, Suite 400
Cost: $125*
*includes 1 free ticket to a Mainstage performance of your choice
To register, email outreach(at)canasiandance.com

Contemplative writing is practical, radical, and transformative, developing capacities for deep concentration and quieting the mind in the midst of the action and distraction that fills everyday life. This state of calm centeredness is an aid to exploration of meaning, purpose and values. Contemplative practices can help develop greater empathy and communication skills, improve focus and attention, reduce stress and enhance creativity, supporting a loving and compassionate approach to life.
Sarah Selecky has been teaching people, locally and abroad, how to write mindfully since 2001. She has studied with exceptional teachers, including Natalie Goldberg, Lynda Barry and Zsuzsi Gartner, and works under their influence. Sarah is an alumna of the Humber School for Writers, the Banff Wired Writing Program, and graduated from the University of British Columbia’s Optional-Residency program with an MFA in Creative Writing. Sarah Selecky wrote a book of stories called This Cake Is for the Party. The book was a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the Commonwealth Prize for Best First Book in Canada and the Carribean, and it was longlisted for the Frank O’Connor Prize. She has been published in The Walrus, Elle Canada, Geist, and The Journey Prize Anthology.
-
Contemplative Calligraphy with Noriko Maeda← back
May 5, 2013
3:00 – 5:00 PM
Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, 6 Garamond Court
Cost: $45 (includes materials)*
Presented in association with the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
*includes 1 free ticket to a Mainstage performance of your choice
To register, email outreach(at)canasiandance.com
This workshop will explore the contemplative art of Japanese and Chinese writing with ink and brush. Through the use of a different media, Sho: Japanese Calligraphy, this workshop will look at different ways to express feelings and scenery using Japanese characters. www.norikomaeda.com
-
Labyrinth Walks← back
Monday April 29 at 12:00 pm (International Dance Day)
Wednesday May 1 at 12:00 pm (Asian Heritage Month)
Saturday May 4 at 1:00 pm (World Labyrinth Day)
Location: Toronto Public Labyrinth in Trinity Square Park (Eaton Centre)
Presented in association with the Labyrinth Community Network (www.labyrinthnetwork.ca).
Join us for a free lunch time labyrinth walk led by composer and Shakuhachi musician Debbie Danbrook.
Labyrinth walking in an ancient practice used by many different faiths for spiritual centering, contemplation and prayer. Entering the serpentine path of a labyrinth, the walker walks slowly while quieting their mind and focusing on a spiritual question or prayer.
To sign up and for more information please e-mail outreach(at)canasiandance.com
Photo courtesy of Labyrinth Community Network


ABOUT CANASIAN DANCE
CanAsian Dance presents and cultivates exceptional dance inspired by Asian ideas and expressions through the biennial CanAsian International Dance Festival and annual artistic, educational and professional development activities.
2013 FESTIVAL DETAILS
From Japanese Butoh to Turkish whirling, experience Canadian and international artists in dynamic main stage concerts, late night performances, film, interactive workshops and more.










