Presented by FORM in Partnership with VIVO Media Arts Centre
Doors: 6 pm
BOXOFFICE LINK:
FORM Box Office
Individual Ticket to Event
With Live Panel facilitated by Nancy Lee, in conversation with FORM leaders Erin Lum, danielle Mackenzie Long, Tamar Zehava Tabori and Sophia Mai Wolfe
To attend Tracing the FORM: An Anniversary Celebration purchase a ticket or Screening Pass through FORM’s Box Office
To open the festival, the team of artists behind FORM celebrate and reflect on our momentous first decade of learning, connections, and creations with our artists, audiences, and peers. In conversation with legacy artist Nancy Lee, we pay tribute to the development of the form—the genre of movement-on-screen—and the framework of FORM. By sharing stories of our evolution and watching films from our past, we take time to map a few of the moments that have had a hand in shaping FORM, complete with cake and celebratory toasts.
We welcome you, our vibrant community of artists and audiences, to FORM 2025 as we usher in our 10th year!
Masks are highly encouraged to be worn at this event, as a form of practicing collective community care. We will have masks available and air purifiers will be on site to assist with providing clean air and circulation.
To learn more about FORM (Festival of Recorded Movement) and the 2025 festival offerings visit f-o-r-m.ca
To attend other FORM 2025 events online or in-person head to visit our Box Office.
For the most up to date information on our 2025 festival access notes visit our FAQ (Festival Access Questions) page.
Screened at FORM 2021
Duration: 10:30
In Plain Sight عیان is the result of months of exploring urban movements on a boulevard in Tehran, Iran. In a society where many questions and restrictions exist around the concept of ‘movement’, three performers try to define the borders of dance. They interact with their surroundings and thus become an integral part of the flow of the city. They accompany each other to find the power of collective movement. The journey is the destination.
Director: Tanin Torabi
Producers: Sina Saberi & Tanin Torabi
Director Assistant: Mahsa Akbarabadi
Performers: Masoumeh Jalalieh, Tina Beyk Abbasi, Tanin Torabi
Cinematography: Masoud Banafsheh
Composer: Faran Fahimi
Choreography: Tanin Torabi in collaboration with Masoumeh Jalalieh & Tina Beyk Abbasi
Production Manager: Mahsa Akbarabadi
Editor: Anis Eshraqi
Colour grading: Farbod Jalali
Photography: Hannaneh Heydari
Style advisor: Sahar Mactabi
Screened at FORM 2023
Duration: 1:32
A ribcage embodies a dance, refusing to allow its movement to be constrained by a diaphragm made of bubble wrap.
Using animation software and motion capture data from a non-binary dance artist’s movement a dance is presented through non-gendered means of performance. opaqueREFUSALS is the first volume of a work-in-progress interdisciplinary project combining movement, digital media, installation, online game design and live performance. The work aims to empower genderqueer dance artists to exist in a world where gender is neither binary, nor defined.
Director, Animator, Dancer, Editor: danielle Mackenzie Long
Sound Designer: Miya Kosowick Mawatari
New Media Support: Freya Björg Olafson, Casey Koyczan
Screened at FORM 2016
Duration: 2:00
André (full name: Hakim Andrusha Ndirembako) is half African, half Russian and raised in Belgium. This projection-on-sand stop motion visualises and describes the search for his identity and his point of view.
Director: Nils Janssens
Participants: Hakim Andrusha Ndirembako, Dimana Shishkova, Kelly de Boelpaep
2023 FORM Commission
Duration: 14:02
RELINQ inverses the relationship between dance and music. Sounds created by dancers have been warped and molded to produce a piece of music led by dancers, rather than a dance piece led by music. Through this mixture of movement and sound, RELINQ captures the unfiltered energy of the Session and offers it to the viewer without external interference.
Through the viewfinder of a camera, the audience is invited to experience the session as a dancer, a spectator, and a fly on the wall.
Directed & Produced by: Colby McLean & Adam Smith
Assistant Director: J. L. McLean
Assistant Producer: Justin Larioza
Shot by Nicholas Alford, Benjamin San Martin
Sound Design and Arrangement: Adam Smith
Edited by: Colby McLean & Justin Larioza
Mentors: Sophia Mai Wolfe, Eric Cheung, Alim Sabir
Dancers (in order of appearance): Colby McLean, Eunice Fae Dionisio, Adam Smith, Skargfy, Samantha Nicole Alvarez Lindo, Justin Larioza
FORM 2019 Commission
Duration: 6:37
soft teeth is an experimental video about mutant creatures that undergo several processes of metamorphosis. It is a playful illustration of metaphysical queer identity in its indefinability and perpetual state of emergence. The creatures morph and merge, birthing new versions of themselves while finding synthesis with their physical landscape. Their soft bodies become a terrain of potential, with body parts growing, shrinking, relocating, and being replaced with images from other worlds. An emphasis on the fantastical allows room for the entities to not rely on a stable future or a concrete narrative, but instead exist in a continually amorphous, unpredictable state.
Director and Choreographer: Zahra Shahab
Art Director and Director of Photography: Arya Hawker
Editing: Zahra Shahab and Arya Hawker
VFX: Arya Hawker
Costume and Installation Design/Construction: Zahra Shahab and Ileanna Cheladyn assisted by Stéphanie Cyr and Juolin Lee
Performers: Hayley Gawthrop and Diego Romero
Sound Design: Roxanne Nesbitt
Nancy Lee 李南屏 is a Taiwanese-Canadian interdisciplinary media artist, DJ, curator, and cultural producer whose work spans XR, installation, A/V performance, and documentary. A Sundance New Frontier alum, their projects—such as Tidal Traces, UNION, and Woven Memory: Copper Bodies—explore embodiment, memory, and diaspora through expanded media. Their work has been shown at Cannes, SXSW, MUTEK, VIFF, and Centre Phi. They are a co-founder of CURRENT and Chapel Sound Art Foundation, and teaches immersive media at IM4 Lab. They serve as a board director for Love Intersections and Normie Corp, uplifting queer voices in media arts and music. They are committed to equity in the arts, supporting queer and underrepresented artists through mentorship, community consultation, and cross-genre programming in Vancouver.
Current FORM Co-Artistic Director
Erin Lum (she/her) is an emerging artist based on the unceded territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) peoples (Vancouver, BC). As F-O-R-M’s youngest staff member, she is passionate about fostering youth-engaged spaces in the arts.
Erin is interested in art-making as a powerful form for (re)defining diasporic identity. This had led her to create films, dance, write, collage, and explore how these practices intertwine. In 2020, she was a F-O-R-M Commissioned Artist and created Zì Jǐ, which has since screened at international film festivals including a weeklong projection onto the National Arts Centre building in Ottawa. Her second short, Something To Forget Me By, premiered in 2022. Erin is completing her undergrad degree in Sociology and Communications at SFU. In 2022, Erin showcased a multi-media project Just By Existing in a group exhibition at the Art Gallery at Evergreen. She is currently expanding this project into a documentary film with the support of DOXA Documentary Festival.
Current FORM Co-Artistic Director
I use a lowercase “d” because I desire to navigate the world by easing into spaces. I go by my full name to acknowledge my maternal lineage.
danielle Mackenzie Long, a queer emerging artist, resides on the stolen and unceded territory of the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh, Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh, and xʷməθkʷəy̓əm nations. They seek to use new media and film to liberate gender non-conforming dance artists to create work that surpasses gendered bodies through various means of visual presentation and audience access.
Their creative practice has been supported by a recent commission from Company 605, as well as residencies with Toronto Dance Theatre (Pilot Episodes) and New Works. At this time danielle’s performance practice is being expanded through engagements with Action at a Distance/Vanessa Goodman, Shion Skye Carter, and self checkout/Lamont. Their past works have been shown through GRRL HAUS CINEMA, XINEMA, New Works, FAVA, and Cinevolution among others.
As Co-Artistic Director and Curator in Residence with Festival of Recorded Movement (F-O-R-M), they work alongside a small team of creatives, supporting the seeds of creations by Youth and Emerging artists whose works speak to the theme of “recorded movement.” They strive to navigate academic structures with an emphasis on curiosity, refusal, and rest, most recently through their studies at the School for Poetic Computation (New York).
FORM Artistic Director (2022-24)
Tamar Zehava Tabori (she/her) dances, creates videos, and works behind the scenes in the arts. With a BFA from Concordia University, her career has spanned national and international stages and screens, shaped by collaborations across disciplines and a deep commitment to shared learning.
Tamar is the General Manager of Recorded Movement Society, home to F-O-R-M (Festival of Recorded Movement). Over the past six years, she has held many roles within the organization, from Commissioned Artist to Artistic Director. Her work reflects an ongoing interest in collective decision-making, thoughtful infrastructure, and building systems from the ground up, shaped not by conventional templates but by the real needs and values of the people they serve.
Alongside her artistic and administrative practice, Tamar is pursuing a Project Management Certificate at BCIT, driven by a belief that everything is a kind of project: from making a film, to shaping a team, to building new systems of care. She’s interested in how structure can support creativity and how strategy can hold space for values.
Tamar is currently an uninvited guest on the stolen and unceded territories of the Coast Salish peoples: the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), Stó:lō, Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh), and xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Nations. She carries deep gratitude for the ability to learn from and be shaped by these lands and their peoples.
Founding Artistic Director (2015-21)
Sophia Mai Wolfe (she/her/hers) is a queer, Japanese-Canadian independent artist. She is currently the Organizational Director of Recorded Movement Society and the founder of F-O-R-M (Festival Of Recorded Movement). She is a grateful guest of what is colonially known as Vancouver, on the territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.
Her interdisciplinary practice moves through dancing, filmmaking, curation, editing, mentoring youth artists and emerging arts leaders, and, on occasion, acting. Her dance practice has taken her abroad, performing and touring internationally with local companies and independent choreographers.
At the heart of her work is movement, and an ongoing exploration of embodiment, a practice that informs not only her performance and filmmaking, but also her curatorial and administrative roles. She holds an MA in Screendance from the London Contemporary Dance School (2022), and is interested in making films and creating experiences for audiences that challenges and slows our attention. She uses film and dance to invite connection and empathy toward the bodies we witness on screen, as well as sensation within the bodies of those witnessing. She works independently and collaboratively with artists and communities to engage audiences in work that moves them through embodied and imaginative experiences.
VIVO is located in the homelands of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) peoples in a warehouse space at 2625 Kaslo Street south of East Broadway at the end of E 10th. Transit line 9 stops at Kaslo Street on Broadway. From the bus stop, the path is paved, curbless, and on a slight decline. The closest skytrain station is Renfrew Station, which is three blocks south-east of VIVO and has an elevator. From there, the path is paved, curbless, and on a slight incline. There is parking available at VIVO, including wheelchair access parking. There is a bike rack at the entrance. The front entrance leads indoors to a set of 7 stairs to the lobby.
A wheelchair ramp is located at the west side of the main entrance. The ramp has two runs: the first run is 20 feet long, and the second run is 26 feet. The ramp is 60 inches wide. The slope is 1:12. The ramp itself is concrete and has handrails on both sides. There is an outward swinging door (34 inch width) at the top of the ramp leading to a vestibule. A second outward swinging door (33 inch width) opens into the exhibition space. Buzzers and intercoms are located at both doors to notify staff during regular office hours or events to unlock the doors. Once unlocked, visitors can use automatic operators to open the doors.
There are two all-gender washrooms. One has a stall and is not wheelchair accessible. The other is a single room with a urinal and is wheelchair accessible: the door is 33 inches wide and inward swinging, without automation. The toilet has 11 inch clearance on the left side and a handrail.
To reach the bathrooms from the studio, exit through the double doors and proceed straight through the lobby and down the hall . Turn left, and the two bathrooms will be on your right side. The closest one has a stall and is not wheelchair accessible. The far bathroom is accessible.