PERFORMANCE / PROJECT
2023
cosmoVISIONS (Brussels, BE)
(im)mortal (Paris, FR)
JUÉ (Bay Area, US)
New Reality (Melbourne, AU)
Virtual Enigma (Berlin, DE)
WE SAY (Vancouver, CA)
2022
+Concepts - Performance and Presentation (Melbourne, AU)
4A - Queer Haymarket Tour (Sydney, AU)
Mutual Space (Melbourne, AU)
Next (Berlin, DE)
Skin (Rimini, IT)
White Waters x Rising Festival (Melbourne, AU)
2021
Base10 (Melbourne, AU)
Sterile Short Film (Melbourne, AU)
Untitled001 (Melbourne, AU)
2020
I Am Maggie (Melbourne, AU)
Digital Projects - Volatile
cosmoVISIONS (Brussels, BE)
(im)mortal (Paris, FR)
JUÉ (Bay Area, US)
New Reality (Melbourne, AU)
Virtual Enigma (Berlin, DE)
WE SAY (Vancouver, CA)
2022
+Concepts - Performance and Presentation (Melbourne, AU)
4A - Queer Haymarket Tour (Sydney, AU)
Mutual Space (Melbourne, AU)
Next (Berlin, DE)
Skin (Rimini, IT)
White Waters x Rising Festival (Melbourne, AU)
2021
Base10 (Melbourne, AU)
Sterile Short Film (Melbourne, AU)
Untitled001 (Melbourne, AU)
2020
I Am Maggie (Melbourne, AU)
Digital Projects - Volatile
PROJECTS
White Waters x Rising Festival
White Waters x Rising Festival
Billowing atmosphere and massive movable screens are the foundation of the epic spectacle that is The White Waters. In 1993, Tian Qiyuan adapted the classic Chinese folk tale, The Legend of the White Snake, for his work White Water. Qiyuan was Taiwan’s first openly gay and HIV-positive student, and co-founder of the experimental theatre group Critical Point Theatre Phenomenon.
Qiyuan’s life and work are now the inspiration for artist Su Hui Yu’s The White Waters. Continuing a story first written in the Ming Dynasty, Su worked with local dancers to find contemporary meaning in the ancient tale of transformation. A dance epic playing with gender, sexuality and queer histories.
created by Huiyu Su @suhuiyu1976
choreographed by Yiling Li @liuiling610
supported by Rising Festival @rising.melbourne
produced by Ari @plasticofcolour
Adriana @nushki_nu
videos captured by Jennifer Ma @jennifoomama Eve Maxwell @age.of.foolishness
Qiyuan’s life and work are now the inspiration for artist Su Hui Yu’s The White Waters. Continuing a story first written in the Ming Dynasty, Su worked with local dancers to find contemporary meaning in the ancient tale of transformation. A dance epic playing with gender, sexuality and queer histories.
created by Huiyu Su @suhuiyu1976
choreographed by Yiling Li @liuiling610
supported by Rising Festival @rising.melbourne
produced by Ari @plasticofcolour
Adriana @nushki_nu
videos captured by Jennifer Ma @jennifoomama Eve Maxwell @age.of.foolishness