Roundhouse Community Centre and other locations05 Jul '18 to 15 Jul '18 @ 10:00 AM - 10:00 PM
The 8th annual Indian Summer Festival returns to Vancouver, bringing global arts and culture to venues across the city from July 5 to 15. A continent-spanning range of award-winning artists, world-renowned musicians and international visionaries will collaborate at inclusive, multi-arts events that will entertain audiences, and encourage intercultural dialogue.
“To celebrate our 8th year, we’ve taken on our biggest theme yet” says Sirish Rao, Indian Summer Festival Artistic Director. “Mythmaking explores ten centuries of human imagination by presenting story-telling in all its many forms. As ever, our approach includes unexpected pairings of the local with the international, traditional with contemporary, from the inheritors of ancient oral storytelling traditions to some of the world’s sharpest journalists guiding us through the contemporary mythmaking that is fake news.”
First round of lineup announcements:
•Indian Summer Festival Opening Party (July 5) – Presented by Concord Pacific. Chef Vikram Vij invites the city's top chefs to join him in creating food inspired by mythology at one of Vancouver’s most sought-after summer parties! Featured culinary artists including Vij’s, Blue Water Cafe, Jamjar, Cacao, Tayybeh, ARC at the Fairmont Waterfront, and James’ Gelato. In addition to a delectable feast, guests will experience Sufi mystic singers and percussionists from all over the world, including internationally acclaimed powerhouse super group, Rajasthan Josh.
•5x15 (July 7) – The festival plays host for the fifth year running to this ever-popular global speaker series, featuring five eclectic artists who will speak for fifteen minutes, unscripted, on a topic they are deeply passionate about. This year’s all-star lineup at The Imperial Vancouver includes Jarrett Martineau, Co-Founder of contemporary indigenous music record label, Revolutions Per Minute, and prize-winning CanLit luminary, Charlotte Gill.
•Confluence (July 7) – An inspiring evening of word and music at The Imperial, bringing together Indigenous and South Asian artists such as Emmy and Juno Award-nominated music producer Adham Shaikh, interdisciplinary artist Rup Sidhu, Anishinaabe singer-songwriter Ansley Simpson, and one of the most compelling Indigenous voices of her generation, writer and musician Leanne Simpson.
•Living Legends – a rare performance of Sanskrit theatre, performed by the Nepathya troupe (July 9) at the Chan Centre – The first time that Kutiyattam, India’s oldest surviving form of Sanskrit theatre, will be performed in Canada. This ancient art-form has remained unaltered for hundreds of years and has been declared by UNESCO as a ‘masterpiece of the oral and intangible heritage of humanity.’
•The Poetry of Amazement – Citra Kavra (July 12) – Hot on the heels of the July 6th premiere of the TV series adaptation of his book Sacred Games (Netflix’ first original series from India), critically acclaimed author Vikram Chandra presents a contemporary exploration of Citra Kavya, making dazzling connections between modern-day algorithms and this ancient Indian tradition of writing poetry in visual patterns.
•Yoga: To Mortify or Cultivate the Body? (July 12) – British Indologist, Sanskrit scholar and Mahant Sir James Mallinson translated Sanskrit yoga texts, epic tales and poetry to explore how the physical yoga practice has evolved from body mortification to modern-day body glorification.
•Hariprasad Chaurasia in Concert (July 14) – Presented by Nature’s Path. Undisputed maestro of the flute, Hariprasad Chaurasia, makes a rare visit to Vancouver. A living legend, he is counted among the last of the great masters of the North Indian Bamboo flute, and is best known for popularizing Indian Classical Music all over the world. He has created music with icons such as John McLaughlin and The Beatles’ George Harrison, and on July 14, is joined by French flautist, Jean-Christophe Bonnafous and classical tabla virtuoso, Subhankar Banerjee at The Orpheum Theatre.
•Songs for Scheherazade (July 15) – a spectacular outdoor performance in the stunning formal gardens of the Ismaili Centre from celebrated sitar player Mohamed Assani and one of the world’s only professional all-female orchestras, the Allegra Chamber Orchestra.
A husband’s fierce jealousy is the trigger for a magical and moving tale, set in Sicily and Bohemia, which begins with a cruel punishment and ends with a miracle.
It’s Italy in 1959, and a group of actors and filmmakers are celebrating the wrap of their latest movie. Movie stars Beatrice and Benedick are drawn to each other but refuse to admit it, and Hero and Claudio’s marriage plans are about to be sabotaged by a journalist’s mean-spirited scheme.