The evening begins in the Bill Reid Rotunda with Croquis, a solo performance by award-winning queer Canadian-Filipinx artist Ralph Escamillan — a live, expressive sketch in motion that sets the tone for the night. Then the runway comes alive in MOA’s Great Hall with designs by professional fashion designers and students responding to the UBC Student Sustainable Fashion Challenge, showcasing bold experimentation and imaginative futures for fashion.
After the show, audiences are invited into MOA’s Multiversity Gallery to meet the designers and connect their work with MOA’s global textile collections — a space for conversation, reflection, and deeper connection.
Experience fashion as art, action, and possibility — with sustainability centre stage.
Schedule
Croquis, a solo performance by Ralph Escamillan
Bill Reid Rotunda| 6 pm
Slow Fashion Show
Great Hall | 6:30 pm
Meet the Designers
Multiversity Galleries | 8 pm
Bios
Ralph Escamillan is an award winning queer, Canadian-Filipinx performance artist, teacher and community leader based on the unceded territories of the xwməθkwəy̓əm, Skwxwú7mesh, Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh Nations – on so called Vancouver, BC. Ralph has worked/toured with a wide range of Vancouver companies, and was a guest dancer with Ballet BC (2020) and winner of multiple awards.




Telka Pesklevits is an undergraduate student in their final year of study in the Anthropology honours program at UBC. As a disabled student, health equity and disability resistance are prominent themes in all of the work they do. Telka is currently undertaking research at UBC’s Museum of Anthropology exploring the topics of museum conservation, public conservation as programming, and access in museum spaces.
She holds an M.A.C. from Queen’s University (Ontario) and a B.Sc. in Biology from the University of Regina (Saskatchewan), and she has also studied art at the First Nations University of Canada. At MOA, Mauray’s work focuses on collaborative research in preventive and treatment-oriented conservation strategies. She co-teaches the conservation course in the Department of Anthropology and is actively engaged in sustainable museum practices and research. An advocate for sharing conservation knowledge, she contributes to public and educational programming. Since 2019, her research has centred on the investigation of pollutants in museum environments.




Nawang Tsering Gurung is a multidisciplinary consultant, translator, speaker, and cultural advocate from Mustang, Nepal, based in New York City. He works to promote Himalayan arts and culture through initiatives such the oral history project
Dr. Fuyubi Nakamura
Writer
Dr. Kabir Mansingh Heimsath