March 21 to 30 — 7:00pm

Let’s confront racism together – 2025

On the occasion of Québec’s Action Week Against Racism, Festival Accès Asie is organizing its 4th edition of Let’s Confront Racism Together, a program that strives to fight racism through art.

 

Partnering with TangenteCentre Kapwa and Soft Gong, the festival focuses this 2025 edition on celebrating pride, creativity, community involvement and recognition, while staying true to the festive atmosphere of its previous edition.

 

This project was born in 2022 from the rise of anti-Asian racism during the pandemic, in collaboration with the Super Boat People collective.

 

Festival Accès Asie acknowledges the support of Canadian Heritage.

edition 2025
Let’s confront racism together – 2025
Tangente | Cinéma Moderne | Maison de la culture Côte-des-Neiges
Book bibim ㅂㅣㅂㅣㅁ - a pocket retrospective Book Piña
DJ Workshops with DJ Fly Lady Di

From January 25 to March 27, 2025 | Maison de la Culture Côte-des-Neiges & Tangente | Free

This series of 5 workshops is intended for all aspiring DJs. Regardless of your level or goals, this comprehensive course will help you learn the fundamentals and develop the right mindset to master this art form.

The course will introduce you to the theory behind DJing, help you gain technical and practical skills, and let you develop your own musical identity. You’ll learn all the basics, from crate digging and building to beatmatching, cue points, scratching, cueing, looping, sampling, and blending.

You’ll wrap up your journey with a live performance at the opening night of PIÑA on March 27, 2025. The evening will be a celebration of DJing and textile weaving, two disciplines that have much in common. Like piña, which weaves separate strands together, DJing twines and melds sounds to create an immersive and unique experience.

 

Who Is It For?

This workshop is designed for anyone interested in exploring DJing, whether or not they’ve already tried this art form. All levels of knowledge and skill are welcome. We strongly encourage young people from the Filipino community to register for these workshops, which showcase the talents of the diaspora.

 

Conditions

  •       12 years and over. Younger people with a strong interest in music and DJing are welcome.
  •       Free with registration. You cannot register for only one of the days. By registering, you commit to attending every session.

·   Bring your DJ controller if you have one!

** AT FULL CAPACITY**

 

bibim ㅂㅣㅂㅣㅁ - a pocket retrospective of kimura byol lemoine 

March 21, 2025 | 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM | Cinéma Moderne | $16 | French & English

bibim ㅂㅣㅂㅣㅁ – a pocket retrospective of kimura byol lemoine opens with a short Super 8mm film made in 1988, a year marked by the Seoul Olympic Games for the artist.

After a two-decade hiatus, kimura byol lemoine resumed zer audiovisual exploration in Canada, the country where ze chose to settle. Through zer striking works, the artist delves into themes of origins, identity, belonging, and intergenerational transmission, while also addressing the political and cultural issues of transnational adoption.

Refusing to conform to traditional artistic conventions, kimura byol lemoine creates powerful, hard-hitting videos that express intimate experiences and the complex realities surrounding zer journey.

 

Conversation with Dédé Chen

Following the screening of bibim ㅂㅣㅂㅣㅁ – A Pocket Retrospective of kimura byol lemoine, a discussion on kimura byol’s profoundly TRANS work will be led by Dédé Chen.

“TRANS-”: A prefix that signifies crossing from here to there, passing through, going beyond. How has this movement shaped kimura byol’s art and activism over the past 30 years? Whether navigating between languages, mediums, countries, or genders, zer work transcends borders and dismantles norms.

Finally, the discussion will explore blind spots and new boundaries to challenge in each era. How can we build an intergenerational bridge and foster political consciousness in a diasporic context?

Dédé Chen’s hybrid role: Moderator, adopted artist-activist, and co-founder of Soft Gong.

BUY YOUR TICKET

PIÑA

Show | March 27, 28, 29 & 30, 2025 | Tangente, Espace Orange | $15-$32

After a mini fiesta with karaoke and Filipino bites, attend the Québec premiere of FakeKnot’s dance show PIÑA. Inspired by artistic director Ralph Escamillan’s experience as a first-generation Canadian-born Filipino/a/x, this work draws parallels between the physicality of this experience and piña, a traditional Philippine fiber made from pineapple leaves. The delicate yet resilient textile mirrors the fragility and strength of diasporic people and, by investigating the many facets of this culturally embedded material, an anthropological journey takes shape. The modular costumes transform as the performance unfolds and restrict the four dancers’ movement, lending it a unique quality. Light bounces off the stark white fabric, making the figures glow like piña. Incorporating folk dance and music, PIÑA explores how the body carries history and ancestry in a globalizing world.

WARNING: The show contains stroboscopic effects.

 

BUY YOUR TICKET

March 27-29, 2025 – 7pm (mini fiesta at 6pm)

March 30, 2025 – 4pm (mini fiesta at 3pm)

🪇 The mini fiesta is karaoke with Filipino bites hosted by the PIÑA team

Discussion with the artists on March 28

 

Credits

  • Ralph Escamillan : Artistic direction and performance
  • Justin Calvadores : Performance
  • Danah Rosales : Performance
  • Elyza Samson : Performance
  • Denisa Reyes : Dramaturgy
  • Jill Laxamana : Costumes
  • Gabriel Raminhos : Lighting design
  • Kimmortal : Original music and sound design sonore
  • Kayleigh Sandomirsky : Stage management

 

Exhibition | March 27, 28, 29 & 30, 2025 | Tangente, Café-Bar

This small exhibit focuses on the iconic Philippine fabric derived from pineapple leaves to which PIÑA owes its title. It includes long panels of the fabric, examples of various stages of pineapple-leaf processing, and an excerpt from a documentary about piña production in the Philippines. It helps to better understand the performance as the dance references the precise movements of the individuals who make this fabric using traditional methods to process the fibres by hand.

Opening Hours

March 27, 28, 29, 2025 – 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM at Café-Bar

March 30, 2025 – 3:00 PM to 6:00 PM at Café-Bar

Credits

  • Master piña weavers Carlo and Raquel Eliserio, Raquels Piña Cloth
  • Philippine folk dance mentor Peter Alcedo
  • Lighting mentor Jonathan Kim
  • Kundiman music mentor Jeremiah Carag
  • Philippine textile historian Sandra Castro
  • Philippine textile conservationist Lenora Luisa A Cabili (Filip+inna)
  • Philippine dress historian Gino Gonzales (Ternocon)
  • Multimedia artist Luna Mendoza
  • Co-founder of HABI: The Philippine Textile Council Adelaida Lim
  • Author and educator Randy Madrid
  • Fashion designer Anthony Legarda
  • Curator of exhibitions at SFO Museum Nicole Mullen
  • Producer and agent Francesca Piscopo
  • Marketing and communications manager Jonathan James
  • Associate producer and accounts manager Kevin Soo-Locsin
  • Accounts manager Ann Hepper

With the support of Canada Council for the Arts, British Columbia Arts Council, City of Vancouver, SFU Woodward’s Cultural Programs, Dance Centre’s Artist-in-Residence program, Toronto Dance Theatre, Far Eastern University (Manila), Dance Victoria, Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre

PIÑA is produced by FakeKnot and co-produced by the National Arts Centre.

Biographies

Danah Rosales

Danah Rosales, also known as Maldita Siriano (she/her/siya), is a Tkaronto-based queer millennial, a second-generation Canadian-Filipinx, a daughter, a dawta, a cister, a solo mama of two little humans, a legendary women’s performance motha of the kiki house of siriano, and a Dora-nominated dance artist whose work encompasses active community building, teaching, collaborative and interdisciplinary choreography and performance. Danah emerges as a choreographer, bringing ballroom arts to the stage with ballroom-specific works that have been presented by Fall for Dance North and Toronto Dance Theatre. She is also the co-chair of the Toronto Kiki Ballroom Alliance.

Dédé Chen

Based in Tiohtià:ke/Montreal, Dédé Chen (she) is a writer and filmmaker whose work explores the performance of kinship. After studying anthropology and international relations, she developed a writing practice blending poetry and politics, addressing themes such as sexual violence, the body as territory, and the archive. In 2024, she co-edited Les Asiatitudes, the first Francophone anthology of authors from Asian diasporas in Quebec. Her autofiction works have been published in several literary magazines. Her first short film, Papaya (2022), premiered at the Toronto Reel Asian Film Festival and won the Coup de cœur award at Festival Accès Asie, as well as an honorable mention at the Filministes Festival and the Vancouver Festival of Recorded Movement. Having grown up between Saguenay and Quebec City, Dédé Chen felt the need to reconnect with her community of origin in an urban setting and to amplify the voices of adoptees. In 2021, she co-founded Soft Gong, the first Francophone organization dedicated to adoptees from China.

 

Denisa Reyes

Denisa Reyes holds an impressive line of works, ranging from classical ballet, modern and contemporary dance, musical theatre, video and dance, dance documentaries and full-length feature films. A former member of Ballet Philippines, Denisa finished a BFA degree in Dance with Honours at the State University of New York and joined several modern dance companies while in New York City. During her 9-year-stint as artistic director of Ballet Philippines, she introduced the Neo-Filipino Dance Series, her most significant contribution to Philippine contemporary dance. It served as a platform for Filipino choreographers to make dance the central force, the impetus, the muscle in collaborating with other art forms: music, visual arts, literature, theatre, and film.

Elyza Samson

Elyza Samson (she/her) is a Filipina interdisciplinary dance artist based in Vancouver, BC, on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. Academic studies include Arts Umbrella’s Dance Diploma Program and a Bachelor in Fine Arts from Simon Fraser University. Professional credits include A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Bard on the Beach, 2022) and Attuning Flesh and Bone (SFU thesis project by Tin Gamboa, 2022). Taking interest in exploring the world between movement and film, Elyza aspires to take the simple, subconscious art of “people watching” and convert it into (gestural) movement in her own dance practice. Drawing inspiration from her recent trip to the Philippines, she found the busy, condense traffic and walking patterns visually appealing, and plans to play with the topography and transpose it into flow of movement. Elyza is excited and grateful to work alongside the FakeKnot team and is eager to further explore her Filipino heritage through dance.

Fly Lady Di

Fly Lady Di (Diana Reyes) is a Toronto-born renaissance woman known for her work as a painter, dancer, and DJ who has been active for 20 years. She has spun for Dior, Tiffany & Co., Twitter, Bastid’s BBQ (Toronto), Jay-Z’s D’Usse Cognac, Rihanna’s Fenty, the Toronto Maple Leafs, and eBay, to name a few. She credits most of her musical tastes to her dancing days in the early 2000s in New York City, where she rocked the industry and the underground house clubs. Di is an open format DJ, but claims golden era hip hop and R&B as her specialty, as well as soulful house and classic dancehall.

Gabriel Raminhos

Gabriel Raminhos holds a BFA from The School for the Contemporary Arts SFU in Theatre Production and Design Program. He is an active Vancouver freelance technical director, production manager, lighting designer, stage manager, technician, and member of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees Local 118. Past projects include associate lighting designer for THIS & The Last Caribou (New Dance Horizons, PuSh 2023); technical director/stage manager for The Outliner (Mascall Dance); and lighting designer for Vidya Kotamraju’s Longing (VIDF 2021). Additionally, he has worked on a few film projects as an electrician and camera operator, and is co-technical director and facilities manager at KW Studios.

Jill Laxamana

A first generation Filipino-Canadian, Jill Laxamana has been working in fashion since 2002. Mainly focused on custom-made bridal and evening wear, her skills in couture details and fit are an important part of bringing Ralph’s visions from concept to piece. Since 2020, they have collaborated on multiple projects, including whip and BLUSCRN, each offering unique challenges and ideas that keep her evolving and growing as an artist. For PIÑA, they also worked alongside fellow Filipinx artist July Nieto, drawing on their shared cultural heritage to create a visually dynamic element to compliment each movement.

Justin Calvadores

Justin Calvadores (they/them) is a second-generation Filipinx, queer contemporary dance artist based in Tiohtià:ke. They grew up on Treaty No. 1 territory, so-called Winnipeg, MB. At the age of 16, they where introduced to dance through a Filipino-led hip hop dance community. Justin completed 2 years of training with the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and is a graduate of the Arts Umbrella contemporary dance program. Justin has danced with Ballet BC as an emerging artist under the direction of Emily Molnar and continued their contemporary dance career with Ballet Edmonton under the leadership of Karissa Berry and Wen Wei Wang. As a freelance performer, Justin has worked with companies and artists such as Action at a Distance, Alyssa Favero, Daria Mikhaylyuk, Dumb Instrument Dance, FakeKnot, F.O.R.M., Heather Myers, Inverso Productions, Isak Enquist, Kelly McInnes, Kinesis Dance Somatheatro, Mascall Dance, Mile Zero Dance, Nicole Von Arx and Guests, The Falling Company, The Vancouver Poetry Society, and Wen Wei Dance. Currently, Justin is an artist with Compagnie Marie Chouinard, as well as Andrea Peña & Artists.

Kayleigh Sandomirsky

Kayleigh Sandomirsky is a stage/production manager, producer, curator and performer, as well as the operations coordinator for The Chop Theatre. Kayleigh works in both theatre and dance, and has toured with productions across Canada. She is also starting to dabble in design and tour management, and loves to constantly shake things up artistically. Recent stage and production management credits, among others: TechniCowlour (PM – The Biting School), Dance in Vancouver (PM – The Dance Centre), EMPTY-HANDED (PM/SM – The Biting School), Agrimony (PM/SM – Sophie Dow and Laura Reznek), Lip Service 3 (PM/SM – Pulsive Party), DBLSPK – Olivia Etey’s Emberré Váltam (PM – rice and beans theatre), All Over the Map 2024 (PM/SM – New Works), Family Room (PM/SM – The Falling Company), Disability Tour Bus: A Radio Play (SM – Realwheels), Medicine (ASM – Pi Theatre), and Sunrise Betties (SM – ITSAZOO Productions).

Kimmortal

Kimmortal aka Kim (they/them) is a multi-hyphenate artist and musician. They are a second-generation settler who grew up in Surrey and is currently living on the unceded traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Nations. Their ancestry is from Pangasinan and Negros Occidental, Philippines. Their last album, X marks the Swirl, was long-listed for the Polaris music prize in an announcement by Buffy St. Marie and their most recent release is a self-produced track, “This Dyke”, which aired on The L Word: Gen QPIÑA is their first opportunity to produce the full soundscape for a contemporary production.

kimura byol lemoine

kimura byol lemoine (ze), a multimedia artist and curator, develops an artistic practice which stands out for its scope and diversity. Zer visual work, poems/essays, and short videos have been featured in solo and group exhibitions internationally. Zer approach, at the intersection of art and activism, resembles a form of militant archiving and unfolds through various mediums: calligraphy, photography, painting, poetry, and video. Born in South Korea and adopted in Belgium, the artist spent more than a decade reclaiming zer mixed-Asian identity before immigrating to Tiohtiá:ke/Montreal, where ze became an active figure in queer and feminist artistic circles. This journey, marked by experiences across multiple continents, reflects a continuous search for new forms of expression and communication through diverse mediums and their multiple potentials.

Ralph Escamillan

Ralph Escamillan is a queer, Canadian-Filipinx performance artist, choreographer and teacher based in Vancouver, BC. Ralph started his training in street dance styles and is a graduate of Modus Operandi, a Vancouver-based contemporary dance program. He has danced/toured/created with Vancouver-based companies, film and TV, as well as been a beacon for the Vancouver ballroom scene since 2017 through his other nonprofit, VanVogueJam. As the artistic director of FakeKnot, he develops collaborative performance works that have been presented both nationally and internationally. Having ancestral roots in the Philippines, he’s fascinated by inquiries into what it means to be North American, especially within the context of cultural traditions, dance, music and costumes in an increasingly interconnected global community. The exploration of how culture is created through the accumulation of ideas and concepts is at the centre of his work. He has found the body to be a powerful vessel through which these ideas can be investigated, incorporating music, costume, and new media.

Partners

Tangente

The first organization to specialize in dance presentation in Québec, Tangente (est. 1980) champions emerging choreographers and offers contemporary dance programming from September to May. Each show is a unique experience that opens onto the experimental and the interdisciplinary. Our two intimate and transformable theatre spaces in ÉDIFICE WILDER – Espace danse allow us to ensure that the avant-garde and the alternative scene have a foothold in downtown Montréal.

FakeKnot

FakeKnot is the umbrella entity for collaborative performance works that play with the complexities of identity and culture through costume, sound, technology, and movement. FakeKnot is grounded in street, commercial, and contemporary dance techniques that honours the queer, POC, Philippine diasporic identity of Artistic Director, Ralph Escamillan. Collaboration as a practice of knowledge co-creation is essential for FakeKnot in the ways it can generatively bring differences together.

Soft Gong

Following Adoptees Month and in response to the rise of anti-Asian racism exacerbated during the pandemic, the Soft Gong 软双恭 Collective was founded in 2022. This collective brings together artists and researchers who share a common identity: being adopted from China to Quebec (Canada). The collective’s mission is to build a sociocultural bridge between their adoptive land, Quebec, and their country of origin, China. Since 1990, Quebec has counted approximately 7,000 Chinese adoptees, with more than 110,000 dispersed across 14 Western countries. The collective was created to address the specific needs of this community.

The objectives of the Soft Gong Collective are as follows:

  • Amplify the voices of adoptees;
  • Offer a space for critical, inclusive, and safe reflection, considering race, ethnicity, class, gender, physical and mental differences, sexual and spiritual orientations, etc.;
  • Highlight resources enabling adoptees to reconnect with their origins;
  • Build a community for adoptees and their allies;
  • Foster a sense of kindness toward their multiple identities.

More information is available on their official website: Soft Gong.

Centre Kapwa

Maison de la Culture de Côte-des-Neiges

The Maison de la Culture Côte-des-Neiges presents films, concerts, performances, and exhibitions. It features a 135-seat performance hall and three exhibition spaces. Entrance is free. Located in the same building as the Côte-des-Neiges library, it hosts nearly 80 performances and around 20 exhibitions each year.

Information

With

Danah Rosales

Dédé Chen

Denisa Reyes

Elyza Samson

Fly Lady Di

Gabriel Raminhos

Jill Laxamana

Justin Calvadores

Kayleigh Sandomirsky

Kimmortal

kimura byol lemoine

Ralph Escamillan

edition 2025
Let’s confront racism together – 2025
March 21 to 30
Tangente | Cinéma Moderne | Maison de la culture Côte-des-Neiges
Book bibim ㅂㅣㅂㅣㅁ - a pocket retrospective Book Piña
in collaboration