Sacred Sacrilegious: Sujit Vaidya

Sacred Sacrilegious is a 40-minute film that explores the body as an offering to the five elements in accordance with Hindu philosophy (Earth, Water, Fire, Air and Space). It is an abstraction of ideas that are placed through the body as moving landscapes. With his collaborators, videographer Robert Kingsbury and sound designer Parmela Attariwala, Vaidya has created virtual worlds for the body to inhabit an idea or a feeling through a series of visuals, each visual carrying something deeper within it. The viewer's gaze is invited to stand on the edge of the visuals and make their own relationships with what's being offered. "Sacred" and "Sacrilege" are offered as invitations to the viewer's gaze.

On Dec. 3 at 7pm SUM gallery hosts a free public screening — and Vancouver premiere — of Sacred Sacrilegious, with Vaidya, Attariwala and Kingsbury in attendance, kicking off a ten-day mini-exhibition.

ABOUT SUJIT VAIDYA

My dance training is in a "traditional" dance form from India, called bharatanatyam. However, my way of engaging with the form is to situate my queerness within the rootedness of tradition and intergenerational knowledge. Some curiosities/ ideas I engage with around Body, Eroticism, Gaze, Queer shame, Queer intimacy and Stillness have been showing up in my work consistently. Slowing down movement and reclaiming/ re- aligning gaze around virtuosity through a non- Eurocentric lens interests me. I like to give the viewer the agency of meaning making. I'm not interested in putting across literal ideas. I like to sense and sculpt spaces for my audience's imagination to inhabit. Rest, leisure, intimacy, stillness, gaze and erotic body are some themes I have explored in Sacred Sacrilegious.

"Traditional” bharatanatyam as practiced and performed today, is a practice of privileged able bodied persons from caste and class hierarchies. It caters to an Eurocentric gaze, with emphasis placed on physical virtuosity. My attempt in my works, including Sacred Sacrilegious, is to dismantle this gaze by using prolonged, sometimes uncomfortable silences to bring attention to the moment and invite ways of being present inside of it. - SV

Tuesday, 3 Dec 7 - 8:30pm

Sun Wah Building

#425-268 Keefer St (4th floor) Vancouver,

Tickets Here