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Open Studio Series, Parbleux Montreal (2025). Photo by Tim de Bouville.

Open Studio Series Toronto


A part of SummerWorks Festival: Industry Series
Tuesday August 12, 2025
1:00 PM - 3:30 PM
Winchester Street Theatre , 80 Winchester Street (VIEW MAP)

Accessibility Info: Unfortunately the Winchester Street Theatre is not currently wheelchair accessible. There are three steps outside of the front entrance, a small platform, and then three more steps to the lobby (a straight hallway that then leads you to the theatre). To access the private gender-neutral restrooms, there are five additional steps at the end of the lobby. The seats in the theatre are on risers with stairs; please contact info@tdt.org if you have any questions regarding accessing our space.


In partnership with Parbleux, Montreal

At the core of its mission, Toronto Dance Theatre (TDT), in collaboration with Montreal-based Parbleux, is committed to improving the conditions under which artists create and share their work. Through the Open Studio Series, co-curated by Clara Furey and Andrew Tay, this initiative offers choreographers a rare opportunity to present works in development to presenters and curators during major festivals in both Toronto and Montreal.

Each participating artist is given a 30-minute slot to showcase their creative process in an intimate, low-pressure setting designed to spark dialogue and support future opportunities. In addition to presentation space, TDT and Parbleux can provide strategic support, offering guidance on touring networks, communications strategy, and more—helping artists take concrete steps toward sustainable artistic careers.

Parbleux – Open Studio 2025 © Tim de Bouville & Betty Bogaert

OPEN STUDIO #7 EDITION

Photo by Nyda Kwasowsky.

The Beast by Eroca Nicols

The Beast is an interactive solo choreography pirated from a proposition from Steve Paxton. Eroca Nicols, choreographer and martial artist, will co-create the work through the negotiation of touch with the audience.

Based on a pedagogical proposition pirated from Steve Paxton’ from his “material for the spine,” and his solo of the same name in (2010); The Beast is a translation of embodied gossip. I have never seen this work nor met Steve Paxton, “the beast” came to me through my friend, teacher and colleague Kelly Keenan. I have used the proposal as a warm up for myself and others. The structure is: one person acts like a beast while another person treats them like a beast. The first person embodies a non verbal beast while “asking” the other to touch them in the ways they wish to be touched.

The Beast deals with both the voyeuristic gaze of audience and the absence of the performer’s gaze–which I lose by becoming the beast; I create a context where the only looking is that of the assembled group. Aside from disciplinary crossings of dance, sex, race and gender performance, my training for this work is in another discipline, martial arts.

The Beast works on the power of bodies to act on other bodies, and the agreements–, be they social, political, or culturalartistic–, that harness and direct this power. 

One person acts like a beast, idiomatically desiring. Another person treats them like a beast. Non-verbal dialogue develops a mode of speculative touch beyond appropriate or polite – but a mode built on conceptions of consensual and ethical collaboration. Play as the non-human activates human ethics.  

Created and performed by Eroca Nicols with Mo LaPlante.
Developed by Eroca Nicols in collaboration with Dramaturgy, written material: Evan Webber, Bobby Benson, set/costume design: Rae Fleury, Carmichael Jones.

 

Stacey Desilier & Jossua Satinee, photo by Noire Mouliom

Braids & Heritage by Jossua Satinée and Stacey Désilier

Satinée merges bodily movement, fashion architecture, and pop icons to interpret a surreal world. This universe allows a being to transform and to build a score in space.

Stacey Désilier integrates her artistic approach into both introspective and collective dance, seeking to reflect personal stories while resonating with universal themes of migration, tradition, and cultural transformation.

Braids & Heritage is a creative concept that fosters multidisciplinary expressions. Satinée and Stacey, allied by the roots of their ancestral heritage and in the shared celebration of it created Braids & Heritage as a point of resilience coming out of the pandemic. The collaboration is a sanctuary and a space for artistic achievements. 

Beginning in 2020, Braids & Heritage stemmed from a DNA test. A discovery of multi-ethnic background propelled the artists’ desire to honor the complexities of their skin. This work translates these complexities and expressions through popular dances and movements created by black folks. From braids to cake walk, moonwalk, twerk, twist and square set, a showcase in celebration of our ancestors.

Concept, choreography, performance, production: Jossua Satinée, Stacey Désilier .
Sound design: Steven Doman.
Delegated production: Parbleux.
Creative residencies: CCOV-Centre de création O Vertigo, L’Annexe-A.
Work in progress presentations: Parbleux Open studio 6 and 7.

Ikebanapapa by Philip Nozuka.

Ikebanapapa by Philip Nozuka

Philip Nozuka is a multidisciplinary artist working across music, video, and performance. A graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada’s acting program, he has appeared in numerous theatre, film, and television productions. As a musician, he recently released Noki Mori, the debut album created in collaboration with his brothers.

INTENT
Combining live video, ambient music, and ritualized role-play, this work explores the performing of rituals to commemorate and summon the presence of family. This work experiments with live video and music technology in an attempt to heighten sensory immersion, layer perspectives and invite an interpreted experience of the work.

PROCESS
The process for this work includes cultivating a practice for experimenting with music and live video feed in different configurations. We are experimenting with lighting, sound, and creating scenes to perform and review to understand the interplay between the live image on the screen and the dynamics of real-life presence.

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