Tiffin Talk:
inherited Forms, Reimagined Futures
Sunday, July 12th, 2026
Ocean Artworks Pavillion
1531 Johnston St
Vancouver
BC V6H 3S6
Doors: 5:30pm
Talk and Dinner: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Accessibility Information:
For information about seating, parking, washrooms, and other accessibility information see Ocean Artworks Pavilion Accessibility Page.
Dance artist and choreographer Sasha Ashwini presents an excerpt from her work-in-progress CROSSING DEEP WATERS, situated in a field of relational possibilities between contemporary and Indian classical dance.
The presentation opens into a dialogue with Tasha Faye Evans and Sujit Vaidya on how to interrogate inherited dance-making practices — unsettling expectations on form, methodology, and post-colonial identity construction while holding cultural frameworks and the Western gaze in generative tension.
MAJOR PARTNER
SERIES SUPPORTING PARTNER
about the artists
Sasha Ashwini
Sasha Ashwini is a contemporary dance artist whose works unfold through ethereal propositions, elemental energies, and alternative perspectives on time based on Indian thought systems. At the core of her practice is a belief that memory can live in the body across generations, and that it is ultimately the land that shapes who we are. Raised in Surrey, British Columbia, in the Greater Vancouver Area, Ashwini’s early experiences were grounded by outdoor activities, such as hiking and camping in the coastal mountains. Ashwini was introduced to Indian Classical dance at a young age and established a professional practice at the age of fifteen. However, like many who experienced a shift in the wake of the pandemic, Ashwini found herself unable to continue performing Indian classical dance as before. She turned instead toward creating her own choreographic works that dive into power, resilience, and softness that resides in the feminine spirit, drawing inspiration from cycles of death and rebirth and the idea that all that is lost comes around new again. In April 2025, Ashwini received the second-place Louise Bentall Award for Emerging Choreographers from DanceHouse Vancouver, supporting her ongoing research for CROSSING DEEP WATERS, premiering in summer 2027.
Sujit Vaidya
Sujit Vaidya is an independent dance artist living and working on the MST territories, also known as Vancouver. Trained in Bharatanatyam, He approaches the form not as static tradition, but as a living, evolving inheritance shaped by embodied memoryand intergenerational lineage. His practice amplifies the vitality of traditional knowledge systems as they move through contemporary lived realities, holding space for multiplicity, fluidity, and transformation. Sujit investigates the body as a site of negotiation—between past and present, devotion and desire, structure and rupture. Engaging with themes of eroticism, gaze, intimacy, and stillness, he is invested in slowness as aesthetic strategy and in reframing virtuosity through non-Eurocentric lenses. As a queer artist of colour, his work emerges from lived experience, often inhabiting discomfort as generative space for dialogue, reflection and reimagination. He has performed primarily as a soloist and created OFF CENTRE (2018), Sacred Sacrilegious (2021), Śṛṅgāra (2023) and Breathe In The Fragrance (2023).
tasha faye evans
Tasha Faye Evans is a Coast Salish dance and theatre artist, educator, and consultant. Her body of work is an intersection of artistic practice, culture, and education woven into dance and theatre performances, city-wide cultural reclamation projects, and innovative curriculum. Her current projects include Cedar Woman, a dance honouring a legacy of Coast Salish women spanning all the way back to a tree, and In the Presence of Ancestors, a life -long exhibition of five Coast Salish House posts being carved and raised in Port Moody. With decades of creation and production, Tasha has participated in performances and festivals nationally and internationally.