With twenty-one years of fostering curiosity and exploring the unknown, the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival is back, Jan 22 – Feb 8, 2026!
A festival for the culturally fearless, PuSh returns with even more reasons to venture out of your comfort zone. With bold performances that push the boundaries of what art and expression can be, this Vancouver gathering of creatives has become an essential local tradition for ushering in the new year with fresh perspectives. As the artistic director, Gabrielle Martin, puts it, “the artists gathered here embody ancestral and emergent ways of living, understanding, relating, and dreaming”. As always, the fest calendar is filled with creators from around the globe who dive headfirst into the creative unknown.
Across the 25 vibrant and thought-provoking performances and events, here are just a handful that will offer welcome bright spots to your winter forecast!
2021 (Canada) | Jan 23 – 24
Under the glow of a flickering screen, a daughter reconstructs her deceased father. Pixel by pixel, contradiction by contradiction. 2021 is a live performance where theatre, AI, and video-game storytelling converge, blurring the boundary between human remembrance and machine logic. An audience member steps into the role of Brian, an unhoused veteran reliving his final weeks inside a looping digital hospital: a labyrinth of corridors, bureaucratic dead ends, and fleeting human contact. Guided by his daughter’s narration, fragments of data become playable memories. Each decision glitches reality a little more.
JEZEBEL (The Netherlands/Belgium) | Jan 22 – 23
Through a collision of physical performance, hip hop visual language, and the slowed, distorted flow of chopped-and-screwed sound, JEZEBEL reclaims the hyper-sexualized image of the “video vixen” that defined hip hop’s golden age. Once framed through a male gaze that fetishized and vilified Black femininity, the vixen now steps into her own frame…stretching the image until its artifice becomes her authorship.
Bardaje (Mexico) | Feb 2 – 3
Rooted in Zapotec understandings of muxheidad, Bardaje reanimates a word used to enforce difference with the gestures, memories, and cosmologies it once pushed to the margins. The work emerges from a lineage that stretches linguistically from Persian barah to Arabic bardaj to Italian bardascia…a genealogy of dissent that refuses colonial definitions of gender and sexuality.
Rainbow Chan (Australia/Hong Kong/Weitou) | Feb 4
Rainbow Chan is a Hong Kong-Australian vocalist, producer, multi-instrumentalist, and interdisciplinary artist celebrated for her inventive blend of heartfelt melodies, textured electronic production, and culturally rich storytelling. Her sound, both tender and experimental, reflects on migration, identity, and the intimate politics of love and loss.
Trouble Score (Belgium/Brazil) | Feb 7
Part ritual, part pop concert, Trouble Score is a hallucinatory portrait of family myth refracted through the lens of magic realism. Weaving multi-layered text, vocals, sound samples, and live music within an otherworldly lighting composition that turns each scene into a luminous portal, this one-night-only performance is a storytelling séance that’s as witty as it is disruptive.
*All included photos are courtesy of PuSh Festival





