This August, Toronto’s contemporary dance landscape pulses with reinvention as dance: made in canada / fait au canada (d:mic/fac) returns for its 8th edition, running August 14–24 across The Citadel and Betty Oliphant Theatre. Known for its adventurous programming, this year’s festival foregrounds “powerful movement and deeply personal storytelling” that reflect who we are — and where we’re heading — through three dynamic strands: Mainstage, WYSIWYG, and Arts Encounters.
For the first time in festival history, Haute Couture debuts — a bold program showcasing full-length works. Its premier offering? Still Life by choreographer and visual artist Marie Lambin-Gagnon, co-presented with SummerWorks and Citadel + Compagnie.
On August 16, Toronto audiences dialed into Still Life — a 60-minute meditation on time, texture, and embodiment. Dancers Megumi Kokuba and Jessica Germano conjured statuesque precision, transforming stillness into potent movement. Brandon Valdivia’s soundscape grounded the piece with ambient textures — raindrops, the tap of metal — while Lambin-Gagnon’s needle-printed photographic textiles draped the stage, blurring lines between installation and performance.
The piece trades narrative arcs for sensory immersion. While Still Life dazzles visually and aurally, some viewers may find its emotional arc elusive — more felt than spelled out. Even so, it marks a daring curatorial leap and offers a cinematic slow-burn worth every moment.
Beyond Still Life, festival-goers have plenty to explore: Mainstage works tackling media, identity, and inclusion; the spontaneous charm of WYSIWYG; and art-meets-dance experiments via Arts Encounters. Festivals have long been about spectacle — this one is about subtle power.
Tickets are pay-what-you-can, starting at just $15 — a perfect invitation to slow down, feel deeply, and reimagine what dance can be.

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