Sunday 12 April 2009

SAVE THE DATE: 4/17 & 4/18 at 7:30 pm

Friday & Saturday, April 17 & 18
Sliding-scale admission: $10 to $15

The Asian Arts Initiative is located at
1219 Vine St. Philadelphia, PA 19107
www.asianartsinitiative.org -or- (215) 557-0455

To buy your ticket today, click here.

siya 4/17 & 4/18

In the spirit of the singular pronoun used in Tagalog language to signify he, she, or any person, Siya is the newest collaborative endeavor by Lovella Calica, L. Capco Lincoln, and Michelle Posadas – Tatlo Mestiz@s. They invite you for an evening of fun as they undress their investigation of gender and gender roles as Pilipino American artists through performance, poetry, and film.

The transplanted trio takes on this performance collaboration to discuss how gender identities have shaped their lives and encourage the audience to imagine a world where we can all live beyond the binaries that bind us. The show takes us through a Pilipino diasporic re-imagination of the many gender possibilities as it relates to our bodies, our families and our ancestral homeland. Let us imagine a gender fluid world by drawing upon the past and bringing genuine hope for the future.

Using their own personal histories and drawing from family experiences, they envision what it is like to be their brothers, fathers, mothers or grandmothers as they struggle through migration, adoption and male privilege. Through these intergenerational stories, they further investigate how living with gender binaries creates power and privilege that end up hurting those affected by imperialism and poverty. They relate it back to a history of both struggle and resistance especially among Pilipino women who have to endure such industries as mail order brides, state sponsored overseas workers and the U.S. military.

We are dancing to a tune of contradictions and pressure discovering beauty and possibility, so we must learn to love ourselves wholly.” - Lovella Calica

Using multiple projections, video, shadow performance and monologues, Tatlo Mestiz@s take us through a journey of the harsh realities of gender oppression both here and in the Philippines. The Mestiz@s don’t leave us hopeless but instead speculate and imagine a world where not only pronouns are singular, but bodies and lives are born into endless possibilities in an open and gentle world.

For more information about the artists click here.

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