Meet our panellists for May 19, 2021!

Gathering Divergence Multi-Arts
Festival & Conference Spring 2021

 May 19 – 21, 2021 via Zoom

The Gathering Divergence Multi – Arts Festival and Conference |  What Have We Learnt: Approaches, Lessons and Future Strategies towards Anti Black Racism, Equity, Diversity, Inclusivity and Digital Support in the Arts is envisioned as a space to gather, diverge with diversity and intersect on the many aspects of the performing arts and the  Arts sector. The festival and conference invites participants from across the world and the Canadian arts sector investigating intersections of artistic / organizational practices grounded in EDIP (Equity, Diversity, Inclusivity towards Pluralism) Divergence is a critical manifestation in critical thinking.  We encourage attendees to think together.

Register today on Eventbrite!
https://gathering-divergence-spring-2021.eventbrite.ca

The Gathering’s schedule is available: https://tinyurl.com/555fpsy6

DAY 1 – May 19, 2021:
Rethinking the  Arts Ecology Through Sectoral Change and Support for IBPOC  Creatives

Key Note by Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall

Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall is a design anthropologist, public intellectual, and design advocate who works at the intersections of critical theory, culture, and design. As Dean of Design at Ontario College of Art and Design University, she is the first black and black female dean of a faculty of design. She leads the Cultures-Based Innovation Initiative focused on using old ways of knowing to drive innovation processes that directly benefit communities.

With a global career, Dori served as Associate Professor of Design Anthropology and Associate Dean at Swinburne University in Australia. She wrote the biweekly column Un-Design for The Conversation Australia. In the U.S., she taught at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She organized the U.S. National Design Policy Initiative and served as a director of Design for Democracy. Industry positions included UX strategists for Sapient Corporation and Arc Worldwide. Dori holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Stanford University and a BA in Anthropology from Bryn Mawr College.

Morning Session:

Taking the Reins: Organizations Doing The Work in Developing Policies for Conflict Mitigation / Crisis towards Change. 
This session involves a panel and workshop involving speakers from organizations CPAMO has been working with in their efforts to embed anti-racism, equity and pluralism values and practices. The panel will include representatives from Workman Arts, Luminato, Fall for Dance North, National Ballet of Canada, Socan and others. Responding frantically to a conflict can further complicate the nature of conflicts themselves  sometimes  influencing a  desired  outcome. Often artists and arts organizations arrive in conflict and in many cases it leads to further harm of artists, organization and ultimately the sector. The panel will be followed by breakout workshops featuring CPAMO’s staff engaging participants in exploring the methodologies of working  to bring about comprehensive anti-racism, equity, pluralism changes to arts organizations governance, practices, programming and Human Resources.

Panellists:
– Nathaniel Hanula-James
– Kelly Straughan
– Celia Smith
– Ilter Ibrahimof
– Barry Hughson

Bios: 

Nathaniel Hanula-James (he/him) is a queer, mixed-race, settler artist. He holds a B.A. in drama studies from McGill University, and graduated from the National Theatre School of Canada’s acting program. Recent performance credits include The First Day Project (Talk is Free Theatre), Tiny Treasures (Manitoba Theatre for Young People), and A (Musical) Midsummer Night’s Dream (Driftwood Theatre). Nathaniel is also a creator and a producer. His object theatre piece Untitled Flamingo Play was featured as part of the Centaur Theatre’s 2019 Queer Reading Series and has received support for further development. He has studied podcasting with Fixt Point Arts and Media, producing at the Paprika Festival, and arts administration at Humber College. The program at Humber led him to participate in Mass Culture’s Woven Histories project with some amazing collaborators. He is so excited that their findings will be presented at CPAMO’s ‘Gathering Divergence’.

Kelly Straughan is currently the Executive Artistic Director of Workman Arts- a multidisciplinary arts organization that promotes a greater understanding of mental health and addiction issues through creation and presentation. She is also the Vice President of the board for the Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts (TAPA). Kelly is the former Executive Director of the Toronto Fringe Festival and President of the Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals. She previously held the position of Associate Artistic Director at Nightwood Theatre and was the Assistant Artistic Director at Tarragon Theatre for three seasons.  She holds a Masters in Theatre Directing from the University of British Columbia.

Celia Smith is the CEO of Luminato Festival Toronto. She is a strategic leader in the Toronto arts and  culture community with proven expertise in directing significant organizational growth, social enterprise  and charitable expansion, and executive management of complex, multi-stakeholder environments. Her  entire career has been in the arts & culture sector, leading significant non-profit organizations, or in the  private sector creating social enterprises.

Ms. Smith has more than two decades in leadership roles across the Toronto arts and culture sector,  including President of Artscape, General Manager of The Canadian Stage Company and interim roles at  the Canadian Opera Company, Toronto Symphony and Opera Atelier. She is a past Board Member for  Luminato, past Board Chair for TAPA (Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts) and Work in Culture, and  currently sits on the board of Toronto Arts Council and Musical Stage Company. Recently, she co founded LEAN (Leadership Emergency Arts Network) – a grassroots pro bono response network to help  Canadian professional non-profit arts organizations deal with the COVID-19 crisis

Ilter Ibrahimof is the Co-Founder and Artistic Director of Fall for Dance North, Toronto’s Premier International Dance Festival.  Born and raised in Istanbul, Turkey, Ilter moved to North America in 1998, first to attend Emerson College in Boston and then living and working in New York City and Montréal before settling in Toronto. Ilter’s own dance touring agency Sunny Artist Management was active from 2004-2020, representing dance companies & artists of the highest caliber from around the world. As a creative mind in the dance field, Ilter is regularly invited to participate in various festivals and conferences in Canada and around the globe as a curator and speaker. In 2020, Dance Collection Danse Hall of Fame awarded Ilter the Sandra Faire Next Generation Award. He lives with his partner Lucas and their two puppies Ginny and Myku.

Barry Hughson joined The National Ballet of Canada as Executive Director in 2014, partnering with Karen Kain to accelerate the company’s trajectory of artistic growth, fiscal responsibility, community engagement and international acclaim.

In 1988, Mr. Hughson began his professional career as a dancer with The Washington Ballet, performing at the Kennedy Center and internationally. After retiring as a performer, he served as Executive Director at a variety of arts institutions in the US, including The Warner Theatre, Complexions Contemporary Ballet, American Repertory Ballet, Atlanta Ballet and Boston Ballet.

Mr. Hughson is deeply engaged with the international arts community and is sought-after as a speaker at industry events around the world. For nine years, he served on the board of Dance/USA, North America’s largest service organization for professional dance. In partnership with Dance/USA and The Royal Ballet, Mr. Hughson spearheaded the first meeting of North American and European executive dance leadership in 2015.

In Canada, Mr. Hughson serves as Vice-Chair of the Canadian Dance Assembly and as a member of the Coordinating Committee for Respectful Workplaces in the Arts, where he chaired the working group responsible for the development of a nationwide Code of Conduct for the Live Performing Arts.


Afternoon Session:

Mass Culture – State of Emergence: Artists Influencing Equitable and Diverse Cultural Policy and Funding Models for a Sustainably Diverse Arts Sector
What does it mean to transform the arts ecology for Canada’s diverse future? Could IBPOC artists  be at the centre of reflexive program guidelines leading to funding models that are specific to their needs?
There are  many things involved in thinking about sustainability of an artist or arts organization.
CPAMO is pleased to partner with Mass Culture as we engage in a conversation with artists, arts workers and the sector to unpack what can be involved in the transformation of the Arts sector. The first in a series of discussion  and exploratory interactive instigating into the potential of a sustainable diverse arts ecology  that equitably supports  IBPOC creatives.

 Panellists:
– Cynthia Lickers-Sage
– Shannon Litzenberger
– Renata Soutter
– Kevin A. Ormsby

Bios:

Cynthia Lickers-Sage is a Mohawk, Turtle Clan visual artist from Six Nations and is currently the Executive Director of the Indigenous Performing Arts Alliance. Following her graduation at the Ontario College of Art and Design she Co-Founded The Centre for Aboriginal Media, imagineNATIVE Film and Media Arts Festival and is the sole proprietor of Clickers Productions. She has spent the last 25 years working in the not-for-profit arts sector as the former General Manager of Kaha:wi Dance Theatre, Executive Director at the Association for Native Development in the Performing and Visual Arts and Executive Director of imagineNATIVE. She has worked within the governmental sector at the Ontario Arts Council (Acting Aboriginal Arts Officer and Community and Multidisciplinary Arts Officer) and the Canada Council for the Arts (Flying Eagle Coordinator) and OP (Fresh Start Officer).

Cynthia serves on the board of directors for CAPACOA and Ontario Presents and has served on a variety of volunteer boards and arts service organizations, including Dance Ontario, Aboriginal Education Council at OCAD, Planet IndigenUS Advisory Committee, Cultural Human Resources Council of Canada, National Aboriginal Network for Arts Administration, Kakawekwewin (Aboriginal advisory committee to the Canada Council for the Arts), Toronto Arts Council, Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, 2013/2014 Dora Mavor Moore Dance jury member, Cultural Careers Council of Ontario and is the proud recipient of the Toronto Aboriginal Business Association’s – Aboriginal Business Women and the Year award.

Shannon Litzenberger (she/her) is an award-winning dance artist, embodiment facilitator and experienced cultural leader working at the intersection of art, ideas and transformational change.

As a dancer and performance maker, her work explores our relationship to land, the politics of belonging, and the forgotten wisdom of the body. She has been an invited resident artist at Soulpepper Theatre, Toronto Dance Theatre, Harbourfront Centre, Atlantic Ballet Theatre, Banff Centre, and the Gros Morne Summer Music Festival. She collaborates frequently with the Dark by Five Inter-arts ensemble and the wind in the leaves collective.

As a skilled freelance strategist, programmer, leadership developer, policy thinker and embodiment facilitator, she works with leading organizations in the arts, academia and the corporate sector. She is currently a faculty member at Banff Centre’s Cultural Leadership Program; a Program Associate with CPAMO; a guest facilitator at the Ivey Business School; a Trudeau Foundation Mentor; and a Chalmers Fellow, exploring the relationship between embodiment, leadership and social change.

Renata Soutter. A co-founder, co-director, choreographer and teacher at Propeller Dance, Renata has dedicated her professional career to socially-engaged dance innovation through creation, performance and education. Renata co-developed (with Shara Weaver and company dancers) a methodology of collaborative creation that focuses on the unique aesthetics of artists with disability and the primacy of self-expression. Her influences include the natural world, and a strong belief in the power and beauty of diverse cultural expression. She is a Diamond Jubilee recipient (2012) and Finalist for Ottawa Arts Council mid-career Artist award. Her creations Living the Desirable Life and Flesh and Spokes have been presented by DanceWorks, GCTC, National Arts Centre and other works have been self-presented in parks, schools gyms, community centres and youth centres. www.propellerdance.com

Kevin A. Ormsby
Program Manager of Cultural Pluralism in the Arts Movement Ontario (CPAMO), Kevin is also the Artistic Director of KasheDance, movement coach and Arts Marketing Consultant. The Ontario Arts Council’s Chalmers Fellowship recipient (2017), KM Hunter Dance Award Nominee (2016), Toronto Arts Council’s Cultural Leaders Lab Fellow (2015) and The Canada Council for the Arts’ Victor Martyn Lynch – Staunton Award 2014 recipient for outstanding achievement by a mid career artist, he has many interests in the creative practice and administration in dance. He has honed his passion for dance, advocacy, writing and education while performing with various companies and projects in Canada, the Caribbean and the United States.


Register today on Eventbrite!
https://gathering-divergence-spring-2021.eventbrite.ca

Accessibility: all sessions will be via Zoom. We will have Otter.ai live transcribed available for all panels (except the breakrooms section). ASL will be provided for the Digital Session on May 21. Please let us know if you have any questions or accessibility needs.

The Gathering Divergence is in partnership with CanAsian Dance Festival, Mass Culture and ArtofFestivals. 

SAVE THE DATE: The Gathering is May 19-21 via Zoom

SAVE THE DATE

Gathering Divergence Multi-Arts
Festival & Conference Spring 2021

 May 19 – 21, 2021 via Zoom

The Gathering has been rebranded as a multi-arts festival and conference. CPAMO launches Gathering Divergence Multi-Arts Festival and Conference (SPRING 2021). A festival / conference focusing on varying topics within the Arts sector grounded in the transformative change embedded in the potential opportunities that arrive from thinking about the Arts in a pluralist framework amplified through a cross-sectoral understanding of Equity, Diversity and Inclusivity. Through panels, workshops, exhibitions and showcases encouraging divergence across arts practices, collaboration and professional development shaped within the sensibilities of art making and networking of IBPOC artists and organizations. 
 
The Gathering Divergence Multi – Arts Festival and Conference |  What Have We Learnt: Approaches, Lessons and Future Strategie towards Anti Black Racism, Equity, Diversity, Inclusivity and Digital Support in the Arts is envisioned as a space to gather, diverge with diversity and intersect on the many aspects of the performing arts and the  Arts sector. The festival and conference invites participants from across the world and the Canadian arts sector investigating intersections of artistic / organizational practices grounded in EDIP (Equity, Diversity, Inclusivity towards Pluralism) Divergence is a critical manifestation in critical thinking.  We encourage attendees to think together.  
 
The launch of the publication  Living in the Skin, I am In: Experiential Learnings, Approaches and Considerations towards Anti-Black Racism in the Arts, continues the conversation on anti-black racism in the arts, it’s impact on black artist’s use of digital technology and the implications one’s artistic / organizational practices. The featuring articles previously published or written along with articles from invited contributors working in all performing arts disciplines including visual arts,  digital / media arts and arts administration. Offering resources, toolkits and an annotated bibliography readers will find value in the international, national and local scope of its contents.  

Stay tuned for the full schedule and registration in the upcoming weeks! 

The panelists for The Gathering on Dec. 9 are announced!


 The Gathering Fall 2020
Exploring Anti-Black Racism in the Arts and Thinking Digitally: Integrative Strategies for IBPOC Arts Practices


December 9,  2020:

KEYNOTE SPEAKER:  Weaving New Legacies of Knowing 
 
Diane Roberts is an accomplished director, dramaturge, writer and cultural animator, who has collaborated with innovative theatre visionaries and interdisciplinary artists for the past 30 years. Her directorial and dramaturgical work has been seen on stages across Canada and her reputation as a mentor, teacher and community collaborator is nationally and internationally recognized. She is a PhD candidate in Interdisciplinary Studies at Concordia University in Montreal, a 2019 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholar and a 2020 Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship award holder. Diane’s celebrated Arrivals Legacy Project www.arrivalslegacy.com has birthed new Interdisciplinary works across Canada, throughout the Americas, in the UK, Europe, Africa and the Caribbean. This work has allowed her to articulate, cultivate and realise a vision for theatre that encourages Indigenous ways of knowing as a stepping stone to creative expression. 
 



Addressing Harassment, Discrimination and Erasure of Black Arts Presence 
Dec. 9 | Time: 10:30am 


We bring our histories to work with us! Black artists / Arts organizations hold a lot of the historical marginalization Where can we begin to understand a conversation rooted in a history of violence, silencing and erasure? In what ways do these still manifest itself in the Arts? What do we hope to gain from this knowledge and its impact on artists and arts organizations working in black arts practices? There have been bureaucratic barriers to sustainability and underfunding for many black arts organizations. How do we begin to galvanize solidarity, understand IBPOC based harassment and discrimination? The plenary invites three speakers to unpack the subject with a focus on shifting the erasure of black arts presence.

Panelists:  


Robert Ball
Born in Toronto, Robert Ball attended Claude Watson Arts Program and later studied part time at Humber College. Robert has traveled to and performed in over 60 countries as a featured vocalist and a headliner with Royal Caribbean International. Robert is a versatile singer songwriter with a Soulful voice and Jazz sensibilities. He has been a part of various Musical Theater readings and workshops working with Tony Winner Lillias White and Oscar and Grammy Nominee Carol Woods. Opening up for artists such as Mary Mary, Keshia Chante, Mya, Big Freeda among others. His original music has appeared in ‘Degrassi’ and has aired on radio stations in Europe, Canada & the United States. He toured his EP “Need” & single “Breathe” throughout Toronto and many PRIDE circuits including Brooklyn Pride, DC pride and Jamaica Pride. Also making appearances on TV outlets CTV, CP24, Bold TV, Rogers Nighttime & Daytime on Rogers, Headlined – Casa Loma “Soul in the City”, Friday Night Live at the ROM. Most recently joining the Stratford Festival for its 2020 season as a lead in the brand new Steven Page (formerly of Barenaked Ladies) musical ‘Here’s What It Takes’. Robert is a steering committee member of ‘BGMN’ (Black Gay Men’s Network of Ontario), a mentor and teaching artist with NIA Centre for the Arts and a ‘Council /Circle Member’ with ACT (A Coming Together – Black Actors / Artists / Employees of the Stratford Festival). His music is available on all steaming outlets. www.RobertBallMusic.com


Charmaine Headley
As Co-Founding Artistic Director of COBA, Collective of Black Artists, Charmaine Headley is a champion of Africanist dance. Through her work as an artist, choreographer, teacher and mentor she advocates for the recognition and inclusion of the contributions of ethno-cultural dance practices in Canadian dance history and culture. Headley pushes for a broadened societal appreciation of these art forms and advocates for reflexivity within curricula. Mother of one, a graduate of the School of Toronto Dance Theatre and a strong believer in the healing power of dance, Headley holds an honours diploma in Gerontology/ Activation Coordination and has created a movement-based senior’s program for her Master’s thesis at York University. Headley uses her choreographic voice to address socio-political and cultural inequity. She draws on Africanist forms, physically and metaphorically, to speak in a contemporary voice. More recently Headley utilizes her artform and creativity to address wellness. Her programming integrates movement with culturally relative resources/themes to create and develop programming that promotes mental and emotional health.


Marcel Stewart
I am my ancestors’ wildest dreams! An actor, writer, dope mc, arts educator, and organizer who LOVES vacuuming the house while listening to the soundtrack to Waiting to Exhale! I am a Black man of Jamaican heritage, born in the UK but raised in Canada. I am a product of colonialism, and am actively working every day to decolonize myself. It is my responsibility, as a Black artist, to carry those who have come before me by affirming our contemporary stories, emotions and ideas through art. It is also important for me to explore the intersections of race and gender, particularly Blackness and masculinity. Breaking down silos by bridging the gap between communities is a core value of mine as an artist. As is genuine kindness, not to be confused with softness. Communication and active listening are the pillars that hold up those core values. I often return to the questions: Who am I? How am I? How did I get here? Who have I lost? What is my purpose? 

Moderator: 

Syrus Marcus Ware 
Syrus is a Vanier scholar, visual artist, activist, curator and educator. Syrus uses painting, installation and performance to explore social justice frameworks and black activist culture, and he’s shown widely in galleries and festivals across Canada. He is a core-team member of Black Lives Matter – Toronto, a part of the Performance Disability Art Collective, and a PhD candidate at York University in the Faculty of Environmental Studies. His on-going curatorial work includes That’s So Gay (Gladstone Hotel, 2016-2019) and BlacknessYes!/Blockorama.
 



Exploring Documenting and Mapping Black Arts Practices / Spaces and Places
Dec. 9 | Time: 1:30pm 


Art, community, creative interactions are often tied into the spaces where black bodies converge. Those spaces are not always performing arts venues, however, there are places where black lives are performed. As part of shaping Canada’s Culture, black creative histories in performance has rarely been documented. Our stories in the creative sector are often relegated to the “one offs”. Yet, black creatives think and access the body, subject and interact with space / places differently. With demographic data and surveys indicating that Afro-Canadians interact with the Arts differently. What are some of these untold stories? The plenary will begin to unpack the ways in which Black arts practices are documented, researched and preserved for future artists and creators. 


Panelists:
 

Emilie Jabouin
Emilie Jabouin is a researcher, a contemporary and Haitian traditional dancer, and a producer completing her PhD in the joint Ryerson/York Communication and Culture program. She (or they) is committed to expressing and producing stories for personal and collective healing by merging her art and research practices. She runs her newly formed dance, research and production company, Emirj Projects, which offers research, production and artistic services to help creatives manifest their vision. Emilie is working on many projects including her own dance story and the co-production of a short science fiction film. Emilie is enriching her dance background in Ballet, jazz and contemporary, by focusing on traditional Caribbean and Central African dance forms. A communications scholar with a background in political science and gender studies, Emilie engages with the archives to share the history of Black women’s organizing, her findings on Black life, health and the arts in Canada.
 

Michèle Moss
Michèle Moss (BEd, MA) is a dancer, choreographer, researcher and community educator. She considers herself a citizen of the world; born in the UK of Jamaican and British parents, raised in Liverpool, London and Montréal, resident of Calgary for the last forty years. She is currently Associate Professor and is serving as Chair of the Dance in the School of Creative and Performing Arts (SCPA) at the University of Calgary in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. She greatly enjoys her UCalgary teaching, research as well as civic and national choreographic commissions, international teaching and the many opportunities to conduct ethnographic research in the field, namely in NYC, and West Africa. Her teaching focus is jazz dance technique, from authentic to Afro-Futurism, global dance practices and pedagogy. Moss’s research mostly takes the form of creation projects but also includes numerous writing projects, articles and book chapters that move from page to stage and back again.  In the middle of the current pandemic the next projects include a drive-in dance spectacle with DJD (Decidedly Jazz Danceworks EST. 1984) a concert jazz dance company she cofounded. 

Paulina O’Kieffe-Anthony
Paulina O’Kieffe-Anthony is an award winning Toronto artist, producer, arts educator, cultural connector and creative consultant.
A member of the League of Poets and associate member of the PlayWriters Guild, her high level accomplishments include being featured in When Sisters Speak, co-producing the Spoken Soul Festival, and representing Toronto as a 2x national team finalist in the Canadian Festival Of Spoken Word. In 2019 she was a TEDx speaker and in 2020 an excerpt of her play How Jab Jab Saved the Pretty Mas was featured as part of Piece of Mine’s Black Women in Theatre Festival. Paulina’s work has been featured in media on Bell Fibe TV, Huffington Post Canada, AfroGlobal TV, Metro Morning and CBC Morning and published in 3 anthologies and 1 book. Paulina was recognized as one of 150 Black Women Making Herstory (as featured on CBC) for her contribution to building the arts scene in Toronto.


Moderator: 

Mercy Nabirye
Mercy Nabirye is a consultant for African Diaspora arts and through her company Kauma Arts, she works with individuals and organisations on strategic programmes to connect communities globally, raise profiles, the practice and awareness of these diverse arts. She is a fellow of the Windsor Leadership as well as The Royal Society for the Encouragement of the Arts. She serves as a Trustee on several boards in the UK, USA and Africa. She is currently working as a consultant with OneDance UK, Royal Borough of Greenwich, Birmingham Royal Ballet and more.

Prior leadership roles include Finance Manager for Apples and Snakes a literary and performance poetry organisation; Operations Manager for Arts Council England’s – Creative Partnerships Kent schools programme; Finance/Co-Director for Future Creatives Kent – Children and young people’s creative learning; Director of the Association of Dance of the African Diaspora (ADAD); Head of Dance of the African Diaspora(DAD) at One Dance UK.  Her artistic background is Performing Arts, Film/photography, writer, dance choreography, practitioner and drummer. She has recently been appointed co-chair of a newly established International committee for the USA-based International Association of Blacks in Dance (IABD), which will share understanding, concerns, education and address growth and development of the global representation of Blacks in Dance.
 



CPAMO GATHERING  FALL 2020 ARTIST  SHOWCASE

Samson Bonkeabantu Brown | Dec. 9 | Time: 11:10am 
Samson Bonkeabantu Brown is a sangoma, ngaka, inyanga, hoodoo, traditional healer, multidisciplinary artist and playwright. His primary focus is on spiritual healing, ancestral veneration, trans advocacy and the arts. He uses the arts (primarily as an actor and playwright) to create visibility for men of trans experience and to educate the general public on trans issues. He has been tasked by his ancestors to shed light on how ancestral veneration can assist with healing the self and living in our purpose.


Rhodnie Desir | Dec. 9 | Time: 3:30pm 
Désir has over 12 years of experience as a choreographer, a public speaker, and a strategist of large-scale cultural initiatives.  Creator of fifteen dance works (RD Creations), her unique choreographic-documentary and Afro-contemporary artistic signature has brought her around the world were she produced the trailblazing project BOW’T TRAIL (www.bowttrail.com) in six countries in the Americas, and participated in the Programmation Culturelle Francophone at the 2016 Olympic Games (Brazil), among others. Winner of the 2016 Grand Prix Lys de la Diversité and President of Montréal, arts interculturels, she is frequently approached by arts councils to serve on their juries (CAC, CALQ, CAM). She hopes to use her knowledge to support initiatives focussing on innovation, equity, the power of art, and citizen speech. In 2020, she breaks two glass ceilings by receiving the GRAND PRIX of the Prix de la danse de Montréal – making her the first Black person and the youngest choreographer to receive this honor for her choreographic work BOW’T TRAIL Rétropek and her BOW’T TRAIL initiative. Her company RD Créations also received the ENVOL AWARD the same year. https://ici.artv.ca/bowttrail/fr 

Esie Mensah | Dec. 9 | Time: 3:45pm
Esie is a multifaceted artist whose creative footprint extends to many genres, disciplines and regions. As a dancer, choreographer, movement director and speaker, Esie brings her mastery in storytelling to audiences as diverse as her experience. From working with megastars like Rihanna, Drake and Arcade Fire to historic brands like Coca Cola, Luminato, TIFF, ROM, Shaw Festival, Soulpepper Theatre and Raptors (to name a few), Esie shows no sign of slowing down.  Through her work in dance, Esie stepped out of her comfort zone to dive into public speaking and was a featured speaker at TEDxToronto 2019. She spoke about her experience as a dark-skinned dancer and creating her Dora nominated production Shades – a work that uncovers the process of healing from shadeism/colorism in the Black community. 

Esie is currently using her voice to bring more inclusive practices to the Canadian dance industry, and continues to touch more and more communities that surround her, worldwide!



For more information and  to register: 
The schedule is available here in pdf
The description of each session is available here in pdf

Register on Eventbrite: https://the-gathering-fall-2020.eventbrite.ca

Important: All the keynotes and panel sessions will be recorded and then made available for viewing to the public, with the exception of Small Group Discussion. Performances and virtual visual exhibitions will not be recorded and only showcased once.  

Accessibility: all sessions except the Mayor’s Roundtable will be via Zoom. We will have Otter.ai live transcribed available for all panels (except the breakrooms section), ASL will be provided for some sessions which will be determined closer to the date. Please let us know if you have any questions or accessibility needs.  

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Kevin A. Ormsby,  Program Manager, CPAMO
programming@cpamo.org or (416) 899-9448

In collaboration with:

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CPAMO is supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, Canadian Heritage, Ontario Arts Council, Toronto Arts Council, English Testing Canada, Barrett and Welsh, LeSageArts Management, and Randolph College for the Performing Arts.