2019 – 2020

Robyn Jacob, Nancy Tam; photo Daniel O’Shea

Double Happiness: Detour This way

Mar 12 – 22, 2020 / Left of Main

Sounding two parallel histories, Double Happiness: Detour This Way winds through complexities of the Chinese diaspora by tracing migration paths of two families, connecting both shores of the Pacific using live music in a multimedia performance.

 

direction, sound design Nancy Tam

performance Nancy Tam, Robyn Jacob, Emily Cheung, Amanda Sum, Emma Postl, Molly MacKinnon, Kevin Romain, Jeff Gammon

songs composition Nancy Tam, Robyn Jacob

projection design Josh Hite

 

A Nancy Tam and Robyn Jacob Production. Produced in association with plastic orchid factory, Neworld Theatre and Music on Main.

Erika Mitsuhashi, Francesca Frewer; photo Cara Tench

Left of PuSh #3

Jan 28 – Feb 6, 2020 / Left of Main

A plastic orchid factory platform for experiments-in-process showings during the PuSh Festival. Now in its 3rd incarnation, Left of PuSh #3 offers 3 mixed bills by local and visiting artists working across disciplines:

  1. Experiment #4 featuring works by James Gnam/plastic orchid factory, Thea Patterson, Marie France Forcier, Melanie Kloetzel/ReLoCate and Nikki Carter. This BC-Alberta migration project, initiatied by ReLoCate, makes space for experimental works that chart new pathways through questions of resilience, delineating how the body and its radical performances can illustrate empowered – and potentially surprising – prospects for individuals, species and communities.
  2. DOUBLE BILL: New research by olive theory (interdisciplinary duo Shion Skye Carter and Stefan Nazarevich) examines the relationship between nature and artificiality, contrasting the embodied and the semi-organic with the synthesized and purely electrical. Francophone theatre artist Gilles Poulin-Denis/productions 2par4 confronts the end of his life by attempting to make his last-ever piece, right now. The Swan Song. The Farewell Tour.
  3. DOUBLE BILL: A new work in progress by Bo Dyp centred around the thunderbird. Kwanxwalaogwa, one who possesses thunder is rooted in Bo’s ancestral name, Kwanxwalaogwa and the spirit in Kwakwaka'wakw culture known to connect the spiritual world with the physical. Bo works from their developed practice as a non-binary drag artist from the Dzawada'enuxw nation, to explore their culture and their intersectional position in body politics. Erika Mitsuhashi and Francesca Frewer examine the precarious space between otherness and togetherness. When we find ourselves faced with fundamental uncertainty, how do we make sense of ourselves, our perceptions, and one another? With movement, text, and theatrical artifice, they use these questions to explore ideas surrounding agency and subjectivity.
 

production team Heather Barr, Natalie LeFebvre Gnam, Gabriel Raminhos

Hanako Hoshimi-Caines, Zoë Poluch, Elisa Harkins; photo Kinga Michalska

ᎦᏬᏂᏍᎩ ᏦᎢ Radio III

Nov 24, 2019 / Left of Main

This is an indigenous futuristic concert, a beautiful and uncomfortable dance performance and a perverse triangle of shifting power that seeks to be unfaithful to both minimalism and postmodern dance’s claims to so-called “neutrality.” As we live, layer and situate form in our bodies, we hurtle through past, present and possible futures. We invite you into a supportive co-existence, separate but aligned, an anthem for xenophilia, a complicit dream, a consensual prophecy: video

 

creation, performance Hanako Hoshimi-Caines, Zoë Poluch, Elisa Harkins

original lighting design Paul Chambers, adapted by Jonathan Kim

costume design Jade Tong Cuong

 

Radio III is the first collaboration between Hanako Hoshimi-Caines, Zoë Poluch and Elisa Harkins and was supported by Canada Council for the Arts, Swedish Arts Council, Swedish Arts Grants Committee, Dance Victoria and Agora de la danse. Premiere, Montréal, June 2019, with co-producer, MAI, Montreal Arts Interculturels. A plastic orchid factory presentation.

Shion Carter, Stefan Nazarevich; photo Brenda Nicole Kent

reach-close

Oct 6, 2019 / Left of Main

Existing at the intersection between live sound, embodied performance and installation art, this immersive experience investigates what defines an “instrument.” It attempts to transform an entire room into a structure that both performers and audiences can directly interact with: video

 

creation, performance olive theory

mentorship Sabrina Schroeder, Arne Eigenfeldt

technical consultant Paula Viitanen

special thanks James and Natalie Gnam (plastic orchid factory), Jean Brazeau, Mauricio Pauly, Jarin Schexnider (What Lab), Stefan Smulovitz

 

An olive theory and plastic orchid factory co-production.

Vanessa Goodman, James Gnam; photo David Cooper

I Care What You Think

Oct 3-5, 2019 / Performance Works

How can we be together? In I Care What You Think, failure is beautiful, ugliness is necessary and our wishes, those of the audience and the performers, generate a physical poem that oscillates between observation and action: video

 

creation, performance James Gnam, Vanessa Goodman, Jane Osborne, James Proudfoot

sound Loscil (Shallow Water Blackout), Debussy, Ravel, Kevin Legere

 

A plastic orchid factory production, presented in partnership with Boca del Lupo.

 

writing about Vancouver Observer, Georgia Straight (2016)

2018 – 2019

Marissa Wong, Marisa Christogeorge; photo Meaghan Gipps

Left of PuSh #2

Jan 26 – 27, 2019 / Left of Main

Ravel is a durational piece by TWObigsteps in which the dancers attempt to deconstruct and unravel a limited movement vocabulary. Highly physical and detailed choreography act as a foundation for the dancers to dismantle the movement material, as well as self-imposed confinements of identity.

 

choreography David Harvey

performance Katie Cassady, Stéphanie Cyr, Sarah Formosa, Andrew Haydock, Eden Soloman, Marissa Wong, Marisa Christogeorge, Matisse Maitland (apprentice)

sound composition Andrew JS

rehearsal direction Amber Funk Barton

 

A TWObigsteps collective production.

2017 – 2018

Riley Sims, James Gnam, Brianna Lombardo, Marc Boivin; photo Mathieu Doyon

Animal Triste

Oct 19 – 21, 2017 / The Dance Centre

In the world’s grand parade, humans are nothing more than sad little animals. Prisoners of a hidden biology that guides their every step. In Animal Triste, a national cast of inexhaustible performers grapple with this inner turmoil, with setbacks and vagaries of living together. At once man and woman, slaves to their desires and anxious to escape them, they are terrestrial beings, wild animals, angels and demons. Side by side, these domesticated primates rush towards something: their ruin, most likely.

 

direction, choreography Mélanie Demers

in collaboration with the performers Marc Boivin, James Gnam, Brianna Lombardo, Riley Sims

dramaturgy Angélique Willkie

rehearsal direction Anne-Marie Jourdenais

lighting design Alexandre Pilon-Guay

original music Jacques Poulin-Denis, Antoine Berthiaume

 

A MAYDAY Danse (Montréal) Production.

2014 – 2015

James Gnam; photo Dominique Skotlz

The Value of Things

Jun 17 – 20, 2015 / The Dance Centre

I choose when the game is won, when the race is run. I say when the deal is done. I want the moon and the sun.

The economist Adam Smith wrote that “All money is a matter of belief.” Has the economy and its mysterious patterns indeed become our modern source of spirituality? In this era where profit is prophet, have we allowed the financial psyche to proclaim itself God?

The Value of Things is an enquiry. It is a nebulous but familiar course that reveals the contradictions of our beliefs and ambitions. It questions the stable growth rate of our comfortable daily routine, our longing for guaranteed investment returns on the dividends of our personal relationships. It misleads the spectator on a voyage through vacuity and spectacle, guiding us on an existential reflection. Performing on live music by Francis d’Octobre, the protagonists explore what defines us, motivates us and moves us as human beings. The Value of Things confronts us to the choices and ethics that govern our lives, surrounded by millions of other lives.

The seriousness of the topic doesn't keep [Jacques Poulin-Denis] from tackling the subject with the humour we've come to expect from him.
Frédérique Doyon, Le Devoir

writer, creator Jacques Poulin-Denis

performers James Gnam, Francis d’Octobre, Gilles Poulin-Denis or Jonathan Morier, Jacques Poulin-Denis

original music Francis d’Octobre, Jacques Poulin-Denis

choreography Jacques Poulin-Denis, James Gnam

dramaturgy Claudine Robillard

lighting Alexandre Pilon-Guay

choreographic assistance Jean-François Légaré

costumes Veronica Classen

 

A Grand Poney (Montréal) Production.

2012 – 2013

Jacques Poulin-Denis, James Gnam; photo Dominique Skotlz

Jacques & James

Dec 4 – 7, 2013 / Firehall Arts Centre

An evening of companion solos.

Co-created by James Gnam and Lee Su-Feh (battery opera performance), James traces one man’s journey from boyhood to manhood through his relationship with the North American ballet classic, The Nutcracker.

Cible de Dieu/Target of God exposes the personal turmoil of an ill-fated anti-hero. With a humorous twirl, the planets align and the stage is set for a catastrophic transition. Target of God has toured internationally to critical acclaim and is the brain child of Quebec interdisciplinary dance artist Jacques Poulin-Denis of Montreal’s Grand Poney.

Gnam gives a totally riveting performance from beginning to end.
Kevin Griffin, Vancouver Sun

Jacques Poulin-Denis est un créateur audacieux, courageux et d’une vulnérabilité touchante.
Montréalexpress

James

conceived by James Gnam, Lee Su-Feh

performer James Gnam

lighting design James Proudfoot

music Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Charles Mingus, Jacques Poulin-Denis

 

Cible de Dieu/Target of God

conceived, performed by Jacques Poulin-Denis

lighting design Marie-Eve Pageau

music Jacques Poulin-Denis, Ludwig Van Beethoven

artistic advice Mélanie Demers

 

Jacques & James lighting director James Proudfoot

2010 – 2011

Chromatic Revelry

May 26 - 28, 2011 / The Dance Centre

A series of 10 short films by Evann Siebens, Chromatic Revelry connects the ordered harmonic scale of J.S. Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier with the chaos of rave culture. Shot on Super 8 film in clubs and at raves in the nineteen nineties, the piece suggests a timelessness to parties, celebration and dance.

 

photo/film exhibit by Evann Siebens

music J.S. Bach

 

Shown alongside _post.