Archive 2011
Archive 2011


WORKSHOPS
Workshop Overview
Add-On Workshops
Workshop Levels
Workshopinfo .pdf
as of May. 26, 2012
program subject to change
Workshops 2011
Gavin Webber
Week1: July 18 - 22
10:00 - 12:00Yoga Chi Gung for Dancers o
12:10 - 14:10Meat & Bone Adv

Yoga-Chi Gung
wonderfully energising and cleansing

Yoga Chi Gung, a form combining the Vinyasa Yoga (the flow of postures) and Chi Gung (the principle of generating chi energy through specific practices) will be combined with the stronger dynamics of Astanga Yoga. They are intended to combine awareness of alignment and energy flow with safe stretching practices and fluidity of movement. They will help create power and simplicity in movement by utilising the inner force of chi energy in the body.
Yoga Chi Gung is a blend of teachings from India, China, Japan and Tibet offering a way of unblocking the life energy, increasing and condensing it and encouraging it to flow freely and smoothly. Like all internal arts, it works on catalysing self-awareness, mental clarity, emotional strength and stability, and physical vitality. It works on the systems, meridians and chakras in the body.
It has a strong Vinyasa (flow) and is a wonderfully energising and cleansing system.”
Gavin Webber, trained as a Yoga Chi Gung teacher and having practised Astanga Yoga for over seven years, takes in other influences as well, namely Alexander Technique and Awareness Through Movement/Feldenkrais.



Meat and Bone
Contemporary technique

This class teaches the dancer how to gain maximum power in movement with minimal effort through the use of momentum. Through the exhaustive nature of the class there is a discovery of the body's natural movement and a desire to arrive somewhere through the path of least resistance. Based on a systematic and relentless series of movements that travel down the room, you are learning through doing and bypassing the time and luxury of questioning. This class is a workout where your own body will become the greatest teacher and where your physical individuality will not be discarded.



Gavin Webber
Gavin Webber fell into dance relatively late, after years spent hitch-hiking, skiing, writing, camping and studying English, Anthropology and Classical Studies. He joined Meryl Tankard Australian Dance Theatre in 1993. He left in 1998 to drive a Kombi van around Europe and Morroco before running out of money and taking a job with Wim Vandekeybus and Ultima Vez in Belgium. He spent three years with the company and was involved in the creation of "In Spite of Wishing and Wanting" and "Inasmuch as Life is Borrowed".
Gavin returned to Australia in 2001 and began teaching and choreographing. Together with other former Meryl Tankard dancers he formed Splintergroup in 2003, working in Brisbane and Berlin. They created two works, "lawn" and "roadkill", which won 6 Greenroom awards in Australia in 2010. From 2005 to 2009 Gavin Webber was the Artistic Director of Dancenorth. Gavin’s work has toured throughout Australia, Asia, Europe and Canada. Most recently he has performed again with Ultima Vez in "Nieuwzwart", choreographed for Stalker and Perth Theatre Company, created a bar brawl for Berlin film maker, Julian Rosefeldt and worked with PVC in Freiburg. He created "Rock Show" with Australian rock band Regurgitator, "Food Chain" with Grayson Millwood, and his latest work, "Little Pig", produced by PVC, performed in Germany in 2010. He is currently living and working in Freiburg, Germany and establishing a new company with Grayson Millwood and other artists combining work in Australia and overseas.
Photo: Gavin Webber © Claudia Kanik